I sat down expecting to spend a few minutes reading about Newton Protocol. Instead, I found myself going back through the documentation more than once, trying to understand what problem it was really trying to solve.

At first, I thought the story was about AI. But after spending more time with it, I realized the bigger theme wasn't intelligence—it was trust.

We're getting used to AI writing emails, answering questions, and helping with everyday tasks. The next step is AI taking actions on our behalf. That sounds exciting, but it also raises an important question: how do we know those actions happen within clear rules that people can verify?

That's what caught my attention about Newton Protocol. Rather than focusing only on making AI more capable, it seems to be thinking about the infrastructure that allows AI-driven strategies to operate securely and transparently.

I like projects that focus on foundations instead of headlines. Infrastructure rarely gets attention, yet it's often the reason technology works in the real world.

I'm not saying Newton has solved every challenge. Building secure systems and attracting developers won't be easy. But I do think it's asking a worthwhile question:

If we expect AI to make decisions for us in the future, shouldn't we care just as much about the systems that keep those decisions accountable?

$NEWT #Newt @NewtonProtocol