Where Law Meets Code in Digital Identity
I started paying attention to SIGN from a different angle this time the legal side. Seeing ideas similar to a National Digital Identity framework behind it makes it feel more grounded. Not just code running somewhere, but something that at least tries to connect with real-world rules and responsibility.
What stands out is the idea that digital identity is treated closer to a right than just a feature. That sounds strong on paper, and honestly, I prefer that direction over systems that expect blind trust.
Still, laws don’t always play out the way they’re written. Enforcement, gaps, and speed of change all matter. Tech moves fast, rules don’t. That space in between is where problems usually show up.
Even then, having some legal structure is better than none. It shows someone is thinking beyond building, and that matters.@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN
