In 2025, SIGN Protocol moved beyond theory when its TokenTable system distributed over $4B to 40M+ wallets across 200+ projects, positioning itself as core Web3 infrastructure. Backed by investors like Sequoia Capital, Circle Ventures, and YZi Labs, SIGN has raised $54M+ across multiple rounds, reinforcing institutional confidence.
Technically, SIGN aims to become the credential and token distribution layer for blockchain ecosystems. Products like Sign Protocol, TokenTable, and EthSign form a unified system for identity, eligibility, and ownership verification. This positions SIGN as infrastructure — not just another token.
Yet a paradox emerges. As more projects rely on SIGN for verification, power centralizes at the trust layer. History shows similar patterns: financial rails like Visa became invisible yet indispensable.
SIGN’s technical credibility is strong, but economic risks remain — VC influence, dependency risk, and governance concentration.
The critical question remains:
If Web3 builds trust on SIGN, can anyone leave the system without losing the trust it controls?
#SignDigitalSovereignInfra @SignOfficial $SIGN
