#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN Most people still reduce Sign Protocol to just an attestation list, which really undersells what it is. That view misses the bigger picture.

In reality, it behaves more like a reusable trust layer. You verify something once, and instead of passing raw data around, you carry a signed proof that others can instantly rely on. It’s a simple shift, but the implications are huge.

Now think about cross-chain environments. They’re often fragmented, repetitive, and prone to breaking. The same checks happen again and again. Sign changes that by letting different apps tap into the same verified claims without redoing the entire process.

But this is where it gets complicated. Who decides which issuers are actually trustworthy? And what happens when a proof becomes outdated or incorrect? These are the parts people rarely discuss.

That’s the real trade-off: smoother, portable trust on one side, and new layers of risk on the other.

#SignDigitalSovereignInfra @SignOfficial $SIGN

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