I revisited
$SIGN after a small test trade that barely moved my PNL. At first, I thought it was just another attestation layer, nothing too deep. But digging a bit more, I noticed something most people aren’t talking about — revocation.
Sign doesn’t “edit” data. Once something is recorded, it stays. If something changes, you don’t delete it — you override it with a new attestation. That means the full history remains visible and auditable.
That actually changed how I see it. In real systems, things break, update, or get corrected all the time. A system that pretends data is static just doesn’t work long term. This feels different — more like version-controlled trust rather than simple storage.
I’m still early in forming a conviction, but this design choice makes
@SignOfficial feel more practical than most infra plays I’ve looked at.
#Sign #SignOfficial #Web3 #Revocation #SignDigitalSovereignInfra