When I look at SIGN, I do not see it as just another crypto project trying to fit inside one easy label. I see a system focused on a deeper problem: how digital networks verify what is true, who is eligible, and how value should move once that proof exists. That is what makes it interesting to me. Sign Protocol works as an omni-chain attestation layer built for verifiable claims, while TokenTable handles token distribution, vesting, claims, and unlock execution. Together, that makes SIGN feel less like a single product and more like trust infrastructure. What stands out to me is the shift from assumption to evidence. Instead of relying on fragmented records, manual checks, or blind trust, the model pushes toward portable proof that can be used across systems. I think that matters because Web3 still needs better coordination rails, and SIGN is clearly trying to become one of the layers that makes digital trust usable at scale.


#SignDigitalSovereignInfra @SignOfficial $SIGN
SIGN-2,44%
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