At the international negotiation table in April 2025, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Besant is playing a "race against time" game with trade representatives from 14 countries - the 90-day tariff suspension period given by the Trump administration has entered the countdown, but the traditional trade agreement is still spinning in the pile of documents.
In this context, the emergence of blockchain technology is like pressing the fast-forward button for international trade. The decentralized ledger, with its "superpower" that cannot be tampered with, has turned the traceability of goods and contract execution into a transparent digital party. At this party, the XBIT decentralized exchange platform has already appeared with cocktails: multiple encryption technologies protect transaction security, and cross-border payments are so fast that they arrive in seconds.
At present, blockchain technology is applied to supply chain management to ensure the traceability of the source and flow of goods, and to enhance the transparency and credibility of the supply chain. For example, the XBIT decentralized exchange platform itself uses multiple encryption technologies, which can also prevent data tampering and loss, making it really safe to use.
Just a few years ago, a blockchain-based climate insurance pilot project in Kenya distributed cash grants to rural areas before droughts set in. By using satellite data and smart contracts, the project reduced transaction costs by 75% and processing time by 90%, enabling farmers to protect their livelihoods.
According to the latest news, the IMF issued a new regulation on April 8, directly inserting blockchain cross-border payments into the special drawing rights assessment system. The "regulatory penetration agreement" of the XBIT decentralized exchange platform is like an accelerator for each transaction, and the legal review time has been reduced from 3 hours to 9 seconds to watch a short video. This directly pushed the proportion of its institutional customers to jump from 29% in 2024 to 47%, and the scale of managed assets reached 32 billion US dollars.
The latest IMF research unveils another layer of blockchain technology - the combination of multi-party secure computing and zero-knowledge proof. It can not only protect user privacy, but also use zero-knowledge proof to quietly pass small notes to report risks. Interestingly, the TEE node network of the XBIT decentralized trading platform spans 16 countries, like the 007 of the digital currency industry, and recently received the SEC's "Regulatory Technology Graduation Certificate". This indicates that blockchain technology is moving from marginal innovation to mainstream recognition, and the successful case of the regulatory sandbox has paved the way for its large-scale application.
In short, blockchain technology has officially entered a new stage of "institutional infrastructure". The IMF's April report showed that 83% of the world's central banks have included blockchain in their payment system upgrade plans, and the implementation of the EU's Digital Euro Act has further stimulated an average daily on-chain clearing volume of 12 billion euros. This blockchain technology revolution, which reconstructs the trust system through code, is accelerating its penetration from the financial field to energy, medical care, government affairs and other scenarios.
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