One thing I’ve noticed watching SIGN is how they’ve quietly engineered things so governments keep the final say on every payout, yet those payouts only fire when a credential proves out cryptographically. It’s not flashy, but it cuts through the usual standoff between heavy handed compliance and open access in a way that just feels workable. Makes me think the bigger programs could dodge a lot of the usual abuse we’ve seen play out elsewhere, even if it means things move at a more deliberate pace.
What stands out even more is the way this setup quietly builds in auditability without forcing every detail onto a public ledger.
You end up with proof that’s strong enough for oversight but light enough to protect real privacy at scale.
It’s the sort of choice that feels born from actual deployment headaches rather than theory.
In the end, it leaves room for genuine adoption instead of another round of pilot fatigue.
@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN

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