Most people think verification and distribution are simple prove who you are, get your share. But in reality, things only look smooth when pressure is low. The moment demand increases, timing, access, and incentives start to shape outcomes.
SIGN is interesting because it tries to connect identity with distribution. That makes systems cleaner on the surface, but it doesn’t remove competition it just shifts it. Instead of racing for speed, people start racing for access.
I’ve seen this pattern before. Systems don’t break in normal conditions, they bend under stress. Delays matter, small gaps get exploited, and fairness becomes harder to maintain.
SIGN doesn’t solve everything, but it organizes the chaos a bit better. And sometimes, that’s the real value not perfection, just a system that holds up a little longer when things get busy.
