I have a system.

Every document. Every contract. Every reference number. Organized by year, kept in a folder that lives in the same drawer for twenty years.

I built this habit because I learned early that nobody keeps records for you. If something goes wrong, you need to prove it yourself.

So I proved it. Every time.

Except once.

I had everything. The right documents, the right dates, the right signatures. Sat across from someone who looked at a screen instead of my folder and said the system showed something different.

I couldn't argue with the screen. I couldn't see what it said. I couldn't correct it.

I left without what I came for.

That afternoon changed how I think about verification.

It's not enough to have proof. The proof has to live somewhere the system can't quietly override.

That's why $SIGN kept coming up when I started looking for something different. Something about how it works felt different. Not tied to one place. Not something that disappears because one system says so.

I saw millions of attestations already made. Governments in different regions already running on this infrastructure. Names I didn't expect to see involved this early.

I still don't know how deep it goes. There was a significant unlock earlier this year and I watched that carefully.

But I keep thinking about that afternoon.

I had everything right. A folder full of proof that meant nothing when the system decided otherwise.

Does your proof actually belong to you or does it just sit in someone else's database until they decide it counts?

@SignOfficial $SIGN #SignDigitalSovereignInfra

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