I have been diving into @SignOfficial recently, and honestly, it changed how I think about digital systems. At first, I assumed trust was enough. But when millions of users, institutions, and agencies interact at the same time, trust alone doesn’t hold up.
What really struck me today while reviewing some examples is how S.I.G.N. relies on attestations records that prove what happened, when, and under whose authority. I actually saw a demo where a CBDC transfer and a benefit distribution were both fully auditable in real-time. That’s the kind of proof that keeps a system reliable at scale.
The stack covers three domains: New Money, New ID, and New Capital. Each one uses the Sign Protocol evidence layer, with schemas defining structured data and attestations confirming actions. Hybrid modes let deployments be both transparent and private.
I tried building a small test case with Sign Protocol myself, and the moment those attestations started flowing, I realized why S.I.G.N. isn’t just infrastructure it’s the backbone of verification in a digital nation.