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Global Systems Demand More Than Code. Can $SIGN Meet That?
Code can move fast.
Global systems are different.
They just can't.
This is the problem that most crypto projects do not think about. It is easy to make something that works when it is used alone.. It is much harder to make something that works everywhere with different rules and institutions that do not trust each other.
At this level code is not enough.
You need something that you can count on.
You need things to be consistent.
And more than anything you need a way to check what is happening without relying on one person or group.
That is where $SIGN comes in.
@SignOfficial does not try to replace the systems that're already in place.
It tries to connect them using data that can be checked.
This includes things like identity, eligibility and compliance.
These are the things that usually slow everything down.
Of each system having its own version of what is true SIGN turns those claims into things that can be checked anywhere.
Once something is checked it can be used anywhere.
This matters when we are talking about systems.
If a user is checked in one system they can use that proof in another system.
If a condition is confirmed in one place it does not need to be checked from the start in another place.
This reduces problems. More importantly it reduces disagreements.
Global systems do not fail because there is not code.
They fail when different groups do not agree on what's true.
SIGN tries to make a standard for that.
This is where things get tough.
Working across borders means dealing with rules, different motivations and sometimes conflicting interests.
Just because something works technically does not mean it will solve problems, with rules or regulators.
So the question is not just whether SIGN works.
The question is whether enough systems are willing to use the way of checking things.
If they are then things will start to work
If they are not then everything will stay separate.
No amount of code can fix that.
#SignDigitalSovereignInfra