Everyone complains about gas fees and bad UI, but honestly… that’s the easy part. You see it, you deal with it, you move on.

The annoying part hits later. When some system has to decide if what you did actually counts.

You’ve probably seen it. Same wallet, normal usage — nothing crazy — and somehow one app treats you like you’ve been active for months while another acts like you barely exist. Makes you wonder what exactly they’re even looking at.

That’s not missing data. It’s just… messy interpretation.

That’s where $SIGN started making more sense to me.

It doesn’t try to “understand” your behavior better. It just records specific things as attestations — like, this happened, this condition was met. No guessing, no pattern-reading. Just a defined record that other apps can check.

Sounds small, but it changes how things feel. You stop doing those extra “just in case” actions. You stop second-guessing whether your activity will count somewhere else.

And it’s not some early concept either. This model has already been used across millions of attestations and billions in distributions, covering tens of millions of wallets.

It’s one of those shifts that doesn’t look flashy at all. But once you notice it, you realize… crypto wasn’t really lacking data.

It just didn’t have a clean way to agree on what actually happened.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN

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