Industries

Built for regulated digital markets.

Five industries where legal infrastructure has not kept pace with the assets already moving through it.

01

Digital Assets

Exchanges, custodians, and DeFi protocols operate across many jurisdictions at once and face law-enforcement demands from several of them simultaneously, often conflicting. Solomaris Shield gives instant, verified guidance on what must be disclosed and what may be withheld; Solomaris Arbitration gives a forum built for the evidence these disputes actually produce.

02

Tokenized Real-World Assets (RWA)

The tokenized RWA market grew from roughly six billion to over thirty-one billion dollars in about sixteen months, led by BlackRock, JPMorgan, and Franklin Templeton. Cross-border legal enforceability remains one of the sector's genuinely unresolved problems — the gap Solomaris Arbitration and Solomaris Vault are built to close.

03

Carbon & Environmental Markets

Carbon credit platforms need legal infrastructure that matches the cross-border, asset-first nature of the instruments themselves — verifiable records, enforceable settlement, and dispute resolution built for the same market structure, not adapted from conventional commodities arbitration.

04

Financial Services

Banks and financial institutions entering tokenized markets need the same certainty they have in conventional finance: enforceable dispute resolution, defensible compliance guidance, and legal research they can rely on without re-verifying it themselves.

05

Government & Public Sector

Governments and regulators building digital-asset frameworks need dispute resolution and contract infrastructure that keeps pace with the markets they are chartering — Solomaris Connect embeds Solomaris services directly into government systems and procurement.