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I used to think credential projects would gain traction just because the idea made sense. Over time I became more careful. A strong concept is not enough if users have to repeat trust checks everywhere and developers keep rebuilding the same verification layer from scratch.
That is why SIGN stands out to me.
What makes it interesting is the shift from isolated verification to reusable infrastructure. Instead of proving something once in one closed environment, credentials can become portable and usable across different applications, communities, and workflows. That changes verification from a one-time event into a coordination layer.
I also think this matters because trust systems usually break at scale when privacy, ownership, and interoperability are treated as secondary issues. SIGN seems to be pushing in the opposite direction.
From a market perspective, attention and volume can show interest, but not necessarily durable demand. What I would watch is repeated credential usage, stronger integrations, and whether real workflows start depending on it. That is where the real signal is.
#SignDigitalSovereignInfra @SignOfficial $SIGN