I keep seeing this idea everywhere, and every time it comes up it’s sold like it’s going to fix everything that’s broken about education, hiring, identity, all of it. One system. Global. Your credentials follow you. No more waiting. No more proving yourself again and again. Sounds great. Too great, honestly.
Because the moment you stop and think about it, the cracks show up fast.
Start with the basics. Credentials are already messy. A degree from one place is not the same as a degree from another. Some courses are solid, some are basically scams, and a lot sit somewhere in the middle. Now take all of that and dump it into one “global” system and expect it to magically make sense. It won’t. People will still question it. Employers will still pick and choose what they trust. Nothing really changes there.
And then people say, “well, the system verifies it.” Okay, but what does that actually mean? It just proves that something was issued, not that it’s valuable. A bad certificate is still a bad certificate, even if it’s perfectly verified. We’re confusing proof with quality, and those are not the same thing.
Then there’s the whole permanence thing.
Once something is recorded, it sticks. That’s kind of the selling point. But also kind of the problem. What if something is wrong? What if it’s outdated? What if you just don’t want it tied to you anymore? Real life changes. People change. Systems like this don’t handle that well. They like fixed records. Clean data. That’s not how humans work.
And of course, tokens get thrown into the mix.
Everything has to be tied to some reward now. Learn something, get tokens. Complete something, get tokens. Prove something, get tokens. It turns the whole thing into a scoreboard. And once that happens, people stop focusing on what matters and start focusing on what pays.
You don’t get better learning. You get optimized behavior.
People will figure out the easiest path to earn the most tokens. They always do. Shortcuts, low-effort courses, whatever works. Someone will build systems just to farm rewards. And suddenly the network is full of noise instead of real value.
It’s predictable.
And yeah, eventually someone will turn those tokens into something tradable. Then you’ve got a whole market built on top of credentials. Prices, rankings, speculation. It stops being about what you know and starts being about what your “profile” is worth.
That’s a weird direction to go.
Another thing that doesn’t get enough attention is how complicated all of this is.
People designing these systems seem to assume everyone is comfortable with wallets, private keys, backups, all that stuff. Most people aren’t. Most people just want to log in and get things done. If you make them jump through technical hoops just to access their own records, they’re going to give up or mess it up.
And when they mess it up, what happens?
Lose your key, lose your access. That’s it. Your credentials are still “there,” but not for you. That’s not just inconvenient. That’s a serious problem.
Then there’s privacy.
All your achievements, your history, your identity—stored in a system that’s meant to be widely accessible for verification. Even if it’s secure, it still raises questions. Who sees what? Can you control it? Can you hide parts of your history, or is everything exposed by default?
Because not everything needs to be permanent and visible forever.
And the whole “global” part sounds nice, but it ignores reality. Not everyone has stable internet. Not everyone understands this kind of tech. Not everyone even wants to use it. So right away, you’ve got people being left out. Again.
It ends up helping the same group it always helps. People who are already connected, already comfortable with technology, already in a position to benefit.
I’m not saying the current system is good. It’s not. It’s slow, fragmented, full of gatekeeping. Moving credentials across borders is a pain. Verifying anything takes forever. There’s a real problem here.
But this solution feels like it’s trying to solve it in the most complicated way possible.
Too many layers. Too many assumptions. Too much focus on sounding advanced instead of actually being usable.
At the end of the day, people don’t care about how the system works under the hood. They care about whether it works at all.
Can I prove my skills easily?
Can someone trust that proof?
Can I move forward without wasting time?
That’s it.
If this whole infrastructure can do that in a simple, reliable way, then sure, it has value. But if it stays complicated, full of tokens and technical barriers and hype, then it’s just another idea that looks impressive but doesn’t really help.
And right now, it feels a lot closer to that.
@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN
