#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN
Most people think the hardest problem in crypto is scaling or liquidity.
I don’t.
It’s trust.
Not the kind we talk about in threads… the kind that actually decides who qualifies, who gets access, who receives value — quietly, in the background of every system.
Right now, that layer is still fragmented. Every platform verifies differently. Every distribution starts from zero. Every identity has to be re-proven, again and again.
That’s not inefficiency. That’s a missing infrastructure.
@SignOfficial sits right in that gap.
Not as another identity app, but as a coordination layer for verification and distribution — separating proof from platform. That design choice matters more than it sounds. It means credentials don’t stay locked where they were created… they can move, be reused, and actually compound over time.
The non-obvious part?
If verification becomes portable, platforms lose their monopoly over trust. And that quietly shifts power away from closed ecosystems toward shared infrastructure.
Still early. Still dependent on who issues and accepts those proofs.
But if that loop closes, $SIGN won’t feel like a product.
It’ll feel like something everything else quietly depends on.
