Most people do not think about ownership until something goes wrong.

A land dispute that drags on for years because the registry is paper based and half the documents are missing. Art provenance that falls apart under scrutiny because the chain of custody was never properly recorded. Property that is technically yours but practically impossible to prove across borders.

I keep coming back to TokenTable for this reason. Not because it sounds impressive. Because the problem it is trying to solve is the kind that most systems quietly ignore until it becomes someone's personal nightmare.

Land titles on-chain. Every transfer cryptographically verified. Complete ownership history that cannot be altered, lost, or disputed away. Art provenance recorded immutably so museums and collectors can prove what they claim to own. Cross-border asset verification that works without bilateral agreements between governments.

Fractional ownership becomes possible too. Real estate that previously required significant capital to access can be divided and traded in smaller pieces.

The whitepaper covers real estate, art, government bonds, securities, and public infrastructure. All of it tokenizable. All of it auditable.

Whether governments actually move this direction at scale is the part I am still watching. The technology is not the hard problem here. The adoption is.

Is the property registry system in your country something you trust? I am genuinely curious how different this looks depending on where you are.

#SignDigitalSovereignInfra @SignOfficial $SIGN