#newt $NEWT One thing I keep thinking about is whether Web3 has been solving the wrong problem. We've spent years making blockchains faster and cheaper, yet privacy and compliance are still treated as if they can't exist together.
That's why @NewtonProtocol caught my attention. Instead of asking users to reveal sensitive information, it explores the use of cryptographic proofs to verify that requirements have been met without exposing personal data. It's a subtle shift in design, but one that could have a meaningful impact on how decentralized applications are built.
The real test isn't the technology itself—it's whether developers and institutions see enough value to adopt it at scale. If they do, privacy-preserving compliance could become one of the defining standards of the next generation of Web3 infrastructure.
@NewtonProtocol
That's why @NewtonProtocol caught my attention. Instead of asking users to reveal sensitive information, it explores the use of cryptographic proofs to verify that requirements have been met without exposing personal data. It's a subtle shift in design, but one that could have a meaningful impact on how decentralized applications are built.
The real test isn't the technology itself—it's whether developers and institutions see enough value to adopt it at scale. If they do, privacy-preserving compliance could become one of the defining standards of the next generation of Web3 infrastructure.
@NewtonProtocol