Fined 2 million euros by the EU, a friend said if only they had used SIGN 😤
Last month, an entrepreneur engaged in cross-border payments asked me out for drinks, saying they were fined 2 million euros by the EU for data compliance violations due to KYC data storage issues. He chuckled wryly: "Either disclose everything to prove innocence or close the door for good. Either choice is wrong."
I showed him @SignOfficial's zero-knowledge proof solution—proving compliance without exposing user privacy.
This is why I believe Sign's technological approach is completely different from 99% of privacy projects on the market.
Most systems force you to make a choice: either disclose everything to prove legality or hide data and lose verifiability. This trade-off has caused countless entrepreneurs to stumble on compliance.
Sign changed this dynamic. Its zero-knowledge proof technology allows you to prove that a transaction or statement is valid without revealing the underlying details. Verification no longer depends on visibility but rather on whether the proof is valid and issued by a trusted source.
Data doesn’t lie: TokenTable has distributed over $6 billion in assets, covering over 50 million on-chain addresses, serving more than 250 projects. This is not data generated by airdrops; it's genuine B-end business.
Compared to Polygon ID, ENS, World ID—others focus on identity or domain names, Sign is the only one that can achieve a full-chain verification layer that balances privacy and compliance.
The current price of SIGN is $0.034, with a 24h trading volume of $146 million. Although market sentiment is average, institutions that truly need compliance are quietly integrating.
No need to disclose everything, just need to prove you are you.
🎁 Lottery Benefits
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🗳 Vote
Do you think privacy and compliance can coexist?
A. Yes, zero-knowledge proof is the answer
B. No, one always has to compromise
C. Depends on regulatory sentiment