The GENIUS Act was signed into law in July 2025. Federal regulators have until July 2026 to finalize implementing rules. Full compliance is expected between 2026 and 2027, with enforcement beginning shortly after. For stablecoin issuers, banks, and any institution touching digital assets, this means 1:1 reserve backing verified through independent audits, BSA/AML compliance, redemption guarantees, and detailed transaction monitoring. The OCC, FDIC, Federal Reserve, and FinCEN are all writing rules right now. Most institutions understand the regulatory obligations themselves. Fewer have fully internalized what those obligations demand from their data infrastructure. When a regulator or auditor asks you to demonstrate that a specific transaction traces back to a specific block on a specific chain, your data infrastructure needs to answer that question. If it cannot, you have a problem that legal work alone will not fix. Most blockchain data infrastructure was built for developers querying token prices or tracking wallet activity. The data pipelines are brittle, the provenance is opaque, and the audit trail is nonexistent. You get a table of results and have to trust that whoever built the pipeline did it correctly. That trust model does not survive a regulatory examination. Amp makes blockchain data verifiable.