I've always believed that blockchain adoption isn't just about making transactions faster or cheaper. The real challenge is building systems that people can actually trust. As millions of new users continue entering crypto every year, security is becoming one of the biggest factors that will shape the industry's future.
That's one of the reasons Newton Protocol caught my attention.
Instead of focusing only on speed or scalability, Newton Protocol is tackling a problem that often goes unnoticed: preventing risky transactions before they ever happen.

Most blockchain networks verify transactions after they're submitted, but Newton takes a different approach. It introduces an authorization layer that checks whether a transaction meets predefined rules before it's approved. In simple terms, it asks, "Should this transaction happen?" before allowing it to move forward.

