Recently, I was sitting in the evening and was exploring @SignOfficial — just out of curiosity, without any special expectations. And at some point, I was a bit "switched on".

I suddenly realized: systems that claim sovereignty cannot rely on trust. It only works as long as everyone plays fair. But as soon as scale, different interests, and rules come into play — it starts to fall apart.

Where legitimacy, compliance, or access is concerned — it ultimately boils down not to trust, but to evidence.

And here is where a puzzle started to come together for me. $SIGN — this is not just a token or tool. It is a way to explain what a system might look like where the foundation is not "trust", but "verify".

Interestingly, government systems have long been moving in this direction. They are simply doing it through complex registries, checks, and bureaucracy. Without a clear cryptographic model.

@SignOfficial essentially makes this logic explicit.

And if you look broader — this is no longer about crypto. It’s about how different systems can interact without the need to trust each other.

And honestly — I am still in the process. But it seems that I am beginning to understand where all this is heading.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN