I’ve been thinking about SIGN, and honestly, it doesn’t feel loud or flashy. It feels like something trying to sit underneath everything verifying credentials and moving tokens without asking for attention. That’s what makes it interesting. If it works, you don’t notice it… you just trust the outcome.
But that’s also where it gets complicated. Verification sounds simple, but it quietly decides what counts and what doesn’t. And token distribution? That’s not just movement it’s access, value, and participation being shaped in real time. At a global level, that’s not neutral.
What stood out to me isn’t the promise it’s the small details. Transparency, how errors are handled, what happens when things don’t fit neatly. That’s where real trust is built… or lost.
I don’t fully understand it yet. But it feels like one of those systems that could quietly change how things work not by being seen, but by being relied on.
