I jumped into the Sign CreatorPad feed earlier today and kept seeing posts where people were testing how Sign Protocol’s attestation system links real-world data (like bank proofs or official records) without leaking extra details. They weren’t bragging about points they were sharing small wins and frustrations with selective disclosure in practice. It felt more like a group of users quietly figuring out if the privacy layer could actually work smoothly for everyday credential needs.

That made me check the token again. It’s hovering around $0.032 right now, market cap near $53 million against a $322 million FDV, with only 16.4% of the total supply circulating. Volume has been holding up decently relative to the cap, but the price has stayed soft. It seems the market is still weighting the unlock schedule heavier than these early privacy-focused experiments.

What still feels unresolved to me is the real impact of this engagement. Sign’s long-term setup comes down to one clear, testable question: will the practical privacy and selective disclosure testing happening in the campaign actually speed up on-chain attestation growth and new wallet activity faster than the scheduled unlocks increase circulating supply? If it does, today’s softness might just be a pause while the credential infrastructure matures. If not, the attention could fade. I’ll be watching the on-chain numbers in the coming weeks.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN

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