#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN #SignDigitalSovereignInfra I’m starting to see a pattern in Web3 that many of us overlook: identity here is still incomplete. Owning a wallet doesn’t tell anyone who you truly are. It doesn’t explain your reputation, your accomplishments, or the trust others place in you. At best, it’s a key — not a biography, not a record of credibility.

This is where SIGN ($SIGN) comes in. It’s building the infrastructure that has been missing all along: a layer where actions, credentials, and trust finally come together. Imagine a world where your digital interactions, attestations, and verifiable achievements are portable, interoperable, and meaningful across ecosystems. That’s what Sign is aiming for — not just a ledger of transactions, but a trust layer that gives your digital identity depth.

What excites me most is the vision of portable credibility. With Sign, a credential earned in one place can be validated and trusted anywhere else without friction. It’s a system designed to reflect not just “what you own” but “who you are” in the decentralized space. And this could redefine how we approach governance, collaboration, and verification in Web3.

This isn’t just another protocol. It’s a step toward a future where digital identity is actionable, verifiable, and meaningful. Where wallets no longer just store assets — they carry reputation and trust.

For anyone thinking seriously about Web3 identity, trust, and credentialing, $SIGN and #SignDigitalSovereignInfra are worth a close look. The missing piece of Web3 identity might finally be taking shape.