To be honest, recently my friends have been working on a consumer loyalty program for a multinational brand, and they are stuck in a deadlock: they want to use blockchain to issue points, making them tradable and having a secondary market, but they are also afraid of violating financial securities regulations in various countries. The laws in the United States, Europe, and Asia are all different, and one wrong step could lead to exorbitant fines.
This suddenly made me understand the true power of Vanar's 'compliance-friendly' approach. What it offers may not be a single chain, but rather a 'programmable compliance framework.' Brands can issue points on Vanar, but set through smart contracts: points for EU users are non-transferable (in accordance with local regulations), while points for Singapore users can be traded with limitations. All rules are automatically executed by code, and traces are left on the chain, providing audit proof to any regulatory authority.
This means that Vanar is essentially selling a product of 'compliance as code.' It transforms the legal risks that businesses find most troublesome and uncertain into predictable and deployable technical parameters. In the future, all companies that want to manage global user assets without wanting to go to jail may become Vanar's clients. Its ecosystem may be filled with invisible 'compliance robots' that serve traditional giants.
