Traditional enterprises often feel apprehensive about blockchain: afraid of complex technology, afraid of non-compliance, and afraid of investments going to waste. However, Caldera (ERA) recently launched the 'Enterprise Compliance Solution', which is alleviating these concerns.

A cross-border payment company shared its pilot experience on Twitter: by using Caldera to build a 'private Rollup chain' and integrating it with the existing payment system, the cost of small remittances was reduced by 40%, and each transaction can generate reports compliant with the EU's 'Regulation on Markets in Crypto-assets'. More importantly, there is 'flexible start-stop'—after a three-month trial operation, if it proves feasible, it can be scaled up without having to invest several million upfront to build infrastructure.

Compliance details are meticulously handled. On-chain data is encrypted by default, and only authorized auditing parties can view it; it also includes a 'data retention switch' to adjust data storage periods according to different national regulations. Companies involved in supply chain management mentioned that they previously feared being fined for 'non-compliant data after going on-chain'; now, with Caldera, they can 'adjust rules by region' and finally dare to put supplier information on-chain.

The ERA token also retains an 'enterprise channel'. Companies can buy ERA in bulk to recharge 'institutional accounts', deducting amounts used by employees, and they can also issue invoices—this solves the long-standing issue of 'difficult financial accounting' for traditional enterprises. Recently, Caldera also partnered with two traditional payment institutions to support companies in directly purchasing ERA with fiat currency, without needing to first learn 'crypto-to-crypto exchange'.

Currently, seven traditional enterprises are running on the Caldera test chain; although the scale is not large, the 'low-risk trial and error' model is bringing blockchain closer to traditional industries. After all, for enterprises, 'being able to solve problems without causing trouble' is more important than 'how advanced the technology is'. $ERA @Caldera Official #caldera