People still treat Sign like it’s just another identity verification tool, but that’s honestly missing the bigger picture.

What’s actually forming here looks more like a trust infrastructure layer — a system built for environments where proof matters more than promises. Once regulators, institutions, and public systems step in, unverifiable data simply won’t cut it anymore.

In sectors like global payments, digital governance, or infrastructure coordination, systems need verifiable records tied to accountable issuers — not screenshots, not databases, but cryptographic evidence.

The interesting shift is this: apps won’t own user data forever. Instead, they’ll reference reusable signed credentials that move across ecosystems. That fundamentally changes how transparency and responsibility operate at scale.

Sign isn’t just verifying identity.

It’s quietly building the backbone for provable digital systems.

#SignDigitalSovereignInfra @SignOfficial

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