#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN @SignOfficial
I used to think attestations were just about proving something. Proving you showed up early, proving you qualify, proving you exist in a system. But the more I look at what SIGN is building, the more that framing feels incomplete. Proof on its own does not change much. What actually matters is what happens after the proof.

The real shift is when that proof starts deciding outcomes. Who gets tokens. Who gets access. Who gets included. That is where things stop being abstract and start becoming economic. SIGN feels like it is quietly moving into that layer. With tools like Sign Protocol feeding into distribution systems such as TokenTable, attestations are no longer sitting on the sidelines as static records. They are starting to act as inputs that shape real decisions.

What makes this interesting is that it reduces the need to trust each new project from scratch. The logic of distribution can start from reusable proof instead of one-off assumptions. In a space where most systems still guess who deserves what, SIGN is trying to make that process feel earned, traceable, and harder to fake.