Stop........ stop........ stop........

Your attention is needed for just 5 minutes.

I took a closer look at how $SIGN structures its products, and one thing became clear: this is no longer just a standalone protocol.

If it were purely a protocol, a single primitive for others to build on would be enough. But Sign goes further. Sign Protocol serves as the attestation and evidence layer, TokenTable handles allocation, vesting, and distribution, and EthSign manages signing workflows and agreements.

From my perspective, this looks less like a simple protocol and more like a product-driven infrastructure company.

What stands out is that these components aren’t isolated—they revolve around a shared core of trust, identity, capital, and execution. That makes SIGN’s overall thesis much clearer, since it’s no longer ambiguous what they are trying to deliver.

At the same time, this introduces a more complex valuation question. It’s no longer just about whether the protocol is useful, but about how value from these multiple product layers actually accrues back to the token. @zoni crypto #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN