I didn't really get it at first.

I thought systems like this were about storing proofs better making things on the blockchain and easier to verify. That seemed useful. Not that different. But the more I looked $SIGN into the more I realized it's less about storage and more about structure.

What really caught my attention is how it separates meaning from location. A credential isn't tied to one place one blockchain or one moment. It has a structure it can be issued updated even taken away and still be understood across different systems. That sounds simple. It really changes how things work.

I think this is where it gets interesting. Most digital systems today are still over the place. You prove something in one spot. It doesn't really carry over. With something like $SIGN the idea is that proof stays useful when the environment changes.

It's still days of course. A lot depends on who uses SIGN and how its applied. If it starts becoming part of everyday workflows not just one time actions then it stops being a tool people notice and starts becoming something they rely on without thinking.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra

$SIGN

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