Looking at the K-line chart, it feels like a stagnant pool…💔

A colleague has been posting outfit videos on a certain platform for half a year and finally gained tens of thousands of followers. Last week, she discovered someone had directly copied her videos, even replicating the captions, and opened a shop to sell products. She reported it several times, but the platform said "insufficient evidence," which made her furious.

I told her if her video copyright was on the blockchain, there might not be a lack of evidence. @SignOfficial can turn your original content into a blockchain certificate—timestamp, author address, content hash, all verifiable on-chain. Who plagiarizes can be easily identified; just scan the code for comparison, and it's clear who posted first. Even if the platform wants to pretend not to see it, it would be difficult. Moreover, it uses zero-knowledge proof technology, which only verifies "you are the original author" during validation, without exposing your private information.

She asked me how to do it. I said you need to operate a wallet yourself and understand a bit about on-chain interaction. After hearing that, she said it was too complicated… I said there is a bit of a threshold, but at least you know there is this solution! If you get plagiarized again, you can directly send a blockchain link, letting the platform check the timestamp themselves.

She paused for a moment and said: "Yes, it's better than having no way to complain now." I said right, at least the evidence is solid; no one can shirk responsibility. #Sign地缘政治基建 $SIGN

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