Scrolling Binance today made me realize something weird everything looks smooth until you actually try to connect things in the real world, and that is where friction suddenly appears.
$SIGN is basically targeting that exact moment, not the transaction part, but the part where people need to trust what is behind the transaction, identity, agreements, credentials, all the things that are not instantly verifiable across different systems.
Here is a simple situation a team expands into the Middle East, funds move fast ⚡ no issue there, but when it comes to proving who they are, what they signed, and whether those documents are valid across another country, everything slows down again.

It is not because technology is weak, it is because trust does not transfer easily every new partner or jurisdiction resets the verification process, even if nothing has actually changed.
That is the loop most people ignore same data, same identity, same agreement, but verified again and again like it is new every time.
This is why I think $SIGN s not about speed at all 🧩 it is about making proof reusable, so once something is verified, it can move across contexts without restarting the whole process.
If this layer actually gets adopted 🚀 then the impact is not just convenience, it changes how fast businesses can scale, how smoothly capital can move, and how systems start depending on shared verification instead of isolated checks. I know it sounds boring 😅 but the more boring it is, the more likely it becomes something people cannot remove later.