#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN @SignOfficial
One thing that keeps catching my attention with SIGN is how quietly the model of trust in crypto is changing. For years the assumption was simple: if something matters, put it fully onchain. But that idea is starting to look inefficient. In reality, most proof lives off-chain. Documents, credentials, eligibility checks, reputation signals. What matters onchain is the outcome.
SIGN seems to lean into that reality. Instead of forcing the entire evidence stack onto a public ledger, it allows verification to happen off-chain while the final claim settles onchain. In other words, the chain records the result, not the paperwork. That small design choice changes a lot. Markets do not need every detail, they just need confidence that the detail was verified.
If this model keeps spreading, blockchains may start behaving less like databases and more like settlement layers for trust. And projects like SIGN could quietly become the infrastructure that turns real-world verification into programmable action.