I’ve been watching Sign Protocol closely, and it feels like much more than just a verification layer.
On the surface, it simplifies credential verification and token distribution — clean, structured, and far better than messy manual systems.
But the real story runs deeper.
It’s about control.
Who decides what counts as valid proof?
Who sets the eligibility rules?
Who defines the standards behind the system?
And if those rules change… who holds that power?
That’s why $SIGN stands out.
It’s not just about moving tokens or verifying credentials — it’s about turning trust into code.
And when trust becomes programmable, it doesn’t disappear… it shifts into logic, governance, and the people behind it.
That’s what makes $SIGN powerful.
And that’s exactly why it deserves scrutiny.