One thing that caught my eye about @NewtonProtocol is what it is not trying to be.It is not trying to be another blockchain.
It is not trying to be another wallet.
It is not trying to be a compliance platform.
Instead Newton is focusing on something that many Web3 apps are missing: an authorization layer. This layer works with existing infrastructure of replacing it.
That approach makes sense. Developers can keep building on chains that work with Ethereum while adding policies that decide if a transaction should be allowed. Users still control their wallets. Applications do not have to move into a system.
As AI agents get more involved in on-chain activity being able to check permissions before execution could be just as important, as how fast transactionsre. Good infrastructure is not always the visible part of Web3 but it often makes everything else more reliable.I am looking forward to seeing how this design works as the Newton Mainnet Beta keeps evolving.
$NEWT
#Newt
It is not trying to be another wallet.
It is not trying to be a compliance platform.
Instead Newton is focusing on something that many Web3 apps are missing: an authorization layer. This layer works with existing infrastructure of replacing it.
That approach makes sense. Developers can keep building on chains that work with Ethereum while adding policies that decide if a transaction should be allowed. Users still control their wallets. Applications do not have to move into a system.
As AI agents get more involved in on-chain activity being able to check permissions before execution could be just as important, as how fast transactionsre. Good infrastructure is not always the visible part of Web3 but it often makes everything else more reliable.I am looking forward to seeing how this design works as the Newton Mainnet Beta keeps evolving.
$NEWT
#Newt
