I counted once.
In a single week I clicked agree seven times. Different platforms. Different services. Different documents I didn't fully read.
That's not unusual. That's just Tuesday.
I work in other people's houses. I've signed employment contracts, service agreements, tax forms, rental documents. I'm careful. I keep copies. I follow up.
And yet if you asked me right now what I actually agreed to across all those clicks this week I couldn't tell you.
Not because I'm careless. Because it was never really designed for me to understand it.
The terms change. Nobody calls. The privacy policy updates quietly. The data gets used in ways I never specifically approved.
I agreed. That seems to be enough.
This week I read about AI trading tools that can act on your behalf, execute trades, manage positions. And my first thought wasn't about returns.
It was if an AI acts on my behalf, what verifies that it's actually me authorizing it? What proves the instruction came from me and not from someone who got access to my account?
That's when $SIGN showed up again.
Not as a solution I'm certain about. More as a direction. Something that stays with you. Something that doesn't reset every time a platform updates its terms.
I saw millions of attestations already made. Governments already running on this. Names I didn't expect to see involved this early.
I still watch the unlocks. Still not convinced about everything.
But I stopped pretending I know what I've agreed to.
And I started paying attention to anything that might change that.
Do you actually know what you've agreed to this week or did you just keep clicking?
@SignOfficial $SIGN #SignDigitalSovereignInfra #freedomofmoney

