Access in Web3 often looks fair from the outside, but when you zoom in, it rarely is. Rewards go to wallets, not to actual contribution. Activity gets counted, but meaning gets lost.
That’s where SIGN starts to feel different. It focuses on credentials instead of surface signals, trying to verify what someone actually did rather than what their wallet shows.
It’s not a loud idea, but it touches something real. If participation can be proven properly, distribution stops being random and starts making sense.
Still early, still uncertain… but it’s one of those directions that feels necessary as the space grows.
@SignOfficial #signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN
That’s where SIGN starts to feel different. It focuses on credentials instead of surface signals, trying to verify what someone actually did rather than what their wallet shows.
It’s not a loud idea, but it touches something real. If participation can be proven properly, distribution stops being random and starts making sense.
Still early, still uncertain… but it’s one of those directions that feels necessary as the space grows.
@SignOfficial #signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN