#signdigitalsovereigninfra
$SIGN been looking into how their attestation framework works and honestly it feels more real than just theory

what stood out to me is how everything starts with simple attestations. someone trusted can issue a proof about something. like saying yes this person has a credential or yes this action happened. it’s not just data sitting somewhere… it’s something signed and verifiable.

then comes verification. and I like that it’s not just one way. different systems or apps can check if that attestation is real without needing to trust each other directly. the proof carries its own weight.

but what really made me think is the revocation part. because things change. a credential can expire or be taken back. here it’s not permanent forever… there’s a way to update truth when reality changes.

and yeah expiration too. some proofs are only valid for a time. that makes sense. not everything should live forever on-chain.

the selective disclosure part is probably my favorite. you don’t have to show everything. just the part that matters. like proving something without exposing the full story behind it.

overall it feels like $SIGN is not just about storing info… it’s about controlling how truth is shared verified and updated across systems.

and when you think about real world use like governments or finance… this kind of structure actually makes a lot of sense.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra