#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN @SignOfficial

I used to think SIGN was removing trust from the system.
Now I think it’s just moving it somewhere harder to notice.
Because in SIGN, verification doesn’t really start with the user.
It starts with the issuer.
Schemas define the rules.
Attestations carry the proof.
But everything only works if a trusted issuer signed it.
That’s the real trust layer.
And once I saw that, things started looking different.
A DAO doesn’t evaluate you directly.
It accepts whoever the issuer already approved.
A government system doesn’t re-check you.
It trusts the issuer already did.
Even airdrops shift from “who interacted”
to “who was recognized.”
SIGN removes fake signals.
But it also removes the illusion.
Trust didn’t disappear.
It concentrated.
And if a few issuers dominate…
then decentralization doesn’t vanish
it just becomes thinner.
SIGN doesn’t remove trust.
It shows exactly who you’re trusting.