In theory, everything looks fine.
The UI shows a number.
The wallet is mapped.
The vesting schedule looks normal.
Someone even says, “you’re good.”
But then you hit unlock…
and nothing happens.
The Problem No One Wants to Call a Bug
From what I see, this isn’t a typical system error.
There’s no revert.
No warning message.
No red flag.
Just a silent refusal
And that’s actually more dangerous.
Because the system isn’t broken…
it’s conflicted.
What’s Really Happening Under the Hood
This is where SIGN becomes deeper than most people realize.
You have three layers:
Allocation → Real (tokens assigned)
Attestation → Present (proof exists)
Eligibility → Failing (doesn’t pass current rules)
Same data, different interpretation.
And that creates a gap:
“You have it… but you can’t access it.”
The Split That Changes Everything
Traditionally, people assume:
Allocated = Claimable
But SIGN breaks that assumption.
Now:
Allocation is just a record
Attestation is just proof
Eligibility is a dynamic condition
And that condition can change anytime.
Why This Is a Bigger Deal Than It Looks
From my perspective, this is where Web3 systems become real systems.
Because now:
Time matters
State changes matter
Rules evolving matter
A user can be:
Valid yesterday
Invalid today
Without doing anything wrong.
The “Quiet Failure” Problem
What bothers me the most is this:
The system knows why it’s blocking you
But it doesn’t clearly tell you
So from the user side:
Tokens exist
Button exists
Action exists
But result = nothing
And that destroys trust faster than an obvious error.
What SIGN Is Actually Exposing
SIGN isn’t just building verification…
It’s exposing how messy real-world logic is
Because when verification becomes a condition for money,
every small inconsistency turns into a real problems
I don’t think this is a flaw in SIGN.
I think it’s a reality check
Web3 is moving from:
Simple distribution
To conditional execution systems
And in that world:
“Allocated” is not enough
“Proven” is not enough
Only currently valid + eligible matters
The system didn’t fail.
It followed the rules.
The real question is:
Are the rules clear enough for humans to understand?
Because if users can’t understand why money isn’t moving…
then even a perfect system will feel broken.
@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN
