#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN
If an AI agent buys something for you, moves your money, or signs a contract on your behalf… how does the blockchain know it was actually
you who allowed that?
Right now, it mostly doesn't. That's a real problem.
SIGN is building the answer to that. Not in a hyped, whitepaper kind of way they actually have governments using their identity tools already. Sierra Leone. UAE. Thailand. Real countries, real ID systems, running on their protocol.
But the part I keep thinking about is the AI angle. KYC checks today are tied to a specific wallet. The moment an AI agent operates from its own address, it has no way to prove it's acting under a real verified human. That gap is going to matter a lot more as agents start handling serious money.
SIGN's system was designed to carry trust across that gap from the human, to the agent, to the action. Whether they execute on it is a different story. But they're one of the very few projects actually positioned to solve it.
Not because they planned for AI agents specifically. Just because verification infrastructure, done right, ends up being useful in ways you didn't originally expect.
So genuinely curious do you think AI agents will ever be trusted to act on chain without a human identity attached to them?