Most people think Web3 is about money, trading, and speculation. But the deeper I look, the more it feels like the real missing piece is trust.

That’s where Sign Protocol becomes interesting. Instead of relying on platforms or intermediaries, it allows users to verify identity, credentials, and transactions through on-chain attestations. In simple terms, it shifts the system from “trust me” to “prove it.”

We’re already seeing real use cases. Projects are using it for transparent airdrop distributions, on-chain agreements, and verifiable user credentials. These aren’t theoretical ideas—they’re practical systems being used right now.

What stands out to me is how this changes the foundation of Web3. You don’t have to trust a platform or a claim anymore. You can verify everything independently.

But there’s still an open question. If verification becomes a standard feature across multiple chains, what makes Sign Protocol the default layer?

Because in infrastructure, adoption gets attention—but standards win the market.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN