
Kerem Soylu
@keremsoylu
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Here’s the kicker: Sign Protocol doesn’t care about the spotlight. While other projects hype tokens or farm engagement, Sign’s Twitter feed ( @ethsign ) is a steady drip of updates—new integrations, protocol launches, community calls—without the chest-thumping bravado of crypto Twitter. This restraint is telling. It’s a project that thrives on utility, not noise, betting that when the dust settles, the infrastructure quietly powering the next wave of Web3 will bear its name.
So, what’s Sign Protocol? It’s not just a tool or a token play—it’s a bid to become the invisible glue of a decentralized world, where every claim, from a signed deal to a digital diploma, can be proven true, no matter the chain. And if it succeeds, we might look back at 2025 as the year trust went on-chain for good. 0 reply
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What’s rarely emphasized is the sheer audacity of its pivot. EthSign started with a laser focus—bringing DocuSign-like functionality to the blockchain, using Ethereum as its bedrock and later expanding to Polygon and other EVM-compatible chains. It was a practical, almost modest ambition: make agreements immutable, transparent, and decentralized. But by mid-2024, as announced on Twitter (
@ethsign) , it shed its skin to become Sign Protocol, an omni-chain attestation framework. This wasn’t just a rebrand; it was a leap into uncharted territory. The project now aims to let users attest and verify any digital information—think property deeds, academic credentials, or even tokenized real-world assets (RWAs)—across multiple blockchains, not just one. It’s as if a local notary decided overnight to become the world’s universal record-keeper. 1 reply
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