SIGN does not present itself as a loud breakthrough. It sits in a category of infrastructure that often goes unnoticed because its value is not immediate or visible. But the longer it is examined, the clearer it becomes that it targets a quiet inefficiency embedded across digital systems. It is not solving a headline problem. It is refining a layer that consistently creates friction but has been normalized over time.
Digital trust today is inconsistent and inefficient. Users repeatedly overshare information to prove simple claims, while systems rely on weak signals that do not truly verify anything. Full documents are exposed when only a single attribute is required. Profiles, badges, and metrics are accepted without transparency around how they were created. Over time, this has become standard behavior. SIGN challenges that default by questioning why proving one fact requires revealing everything.
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