I’ve been noticing that in projects like S.I.G.N. the real story is not just about tokens, activity, or distribution. It is about something quieter. In a lot of systems, the biggest advantage is not simply owning capital. It is being recognized fast enough to use it.
That is what makes SIGN Protocol interesting to me. It sits around trust, verification, and attestations, but the deeper idea is simpler: people and institutions move faster when proof does not have to be rebuilt every time. Some participants carry credibility with them. Others keep starting from zero.
That gap matters more than most dashboards show. Because in real markets, friction is not only about money. It is about approval, recognition, and whether the system already knows who you are.
For me, that is where the value of portable trust starts to become real.
