Most people don’t care about “infrastructure.” They care about not uploading the same damn document five times.
That’s the problem SIGN is trying to fix.
Right now, proving your degree, your skills, or even your identity is slow, repetitive, and honestly outdated. You apply, you upload, you wait… and then do it all over again somewhere else.
SIGN’s idea is simple: prove something once, and reuse it everywhere.
If it works, hiring gets faster. Online credentials actually mean something. And maybe—finally—we stop pretending PDFs are secure proof of anything.
But here’s the catch.
Anything involving tokens and incentives tends to get messy fast. People game systems. They always do. So the real challenge isn’t building it—it’s making sure it doesn’t get exploited the moment it gains traction.
If SIGN can stay useful and avoid becoming a playground for loopholes, it has a shot.
If not, it’ll end up like a lot of “promising” ideas in this space—smart on paper, irrelevant in practice.
Simple idea. Hard execution.
