The regulatory timeline is concrete. The OCC has published proposed rules. The FDIC extended its comment period to May 2026. The Federal Reserve is developing its own framework. Treasury is targeting final rules by July 2026. Full enforcement follows. Institutions that are building their blockchain data infrastructure now have an advantage. Waiting until enforcement begins means retrofitting compliance into systems that were never designed for it, which is significantly harder and more expensive than building it correctly from the start. The requirements are clear: data sovereignty and control, audit-grade reproducibility for regulatory examinations, compliance with GENIUS Act and PPSI requirements, and infrastructure that integrates with existing custody platforms, screening tools, and treasury systems. Edge & Node built Amp for this moment. The initial team behind The Graph and spent seven years building blockchain data infrastructure went back to first principles and asked what regulated institutions actually need. The answer was a database where every query result is provable, every dataset is traceable, and the compliance team can verify the data independently. This is Amp.