I didn’t expect this to be the thing that made me pause, but it did.
While going deeper into Sign, I realized it’s not just another on-chain tool. It’s already connected with real-world ID systems. That changes everything. It means when you sign something through it, that action isn’t just symbolic, it can actually carry legal weight depending on how it’s used.
That’s where it started to feel different for me.
We spend so much time talking about proofs on-chain, but most of it stays inside crypto. This feels like a bridge out of that bubble. Something that can move into real agreements, real documents, real accountability.
I’m watching this closely now. Because if this direction holds, it’s not just about verifying data anymore, it’s about making digital actions matter in the same way as physical ones.
And I think more people are starting to notice that shift too.
