#newt $NEWT > In April, Drift was stolen for 285 million, and KelpDAO was stolen for 290 million. All done by that X crew.
Everyone keeps saying, "The audit wasn’t done properly."
But no audit can uncover an X agent infiltrating your core team over the course of half a year.
@NewtonProtocol isn’t an audit—before every transaction is put on-chain, the EigenLayer operators collectively vote to authorize it. Intercept beforehand, not cover blame afterward.
$NEWT
#Newt #DeFi #On-chainSecurity
When you put your money into DeFi, what protects you is an audit report.
In April, the audited Drift and KelpDAO were robbed in one go by that X crew of nearly 600 million.
The audit tells you the code has no bugs—it doesn’t guarantee nobody will take your money.
@NewtonProtocol did one thing: before each transaction is put on-chain, distributed operators vote to authorize it. It’s not trust in code—it’s trust in consensus.
$NEWT
#Newt #DeFi safety
When you put your money into DeFi, what protects you is an audit report.
In April, Drift and KelpDAO were stolen by that X crew of nearly 600 million. Not a technical vulnerability—it was team infiltration and social engineering. No audit can detect a single agent who spent half a year infiltrating your core team.
@NewtonProtocol, before every transaction goes on-chain, the EigenLayer operators collectively vote to authorize it. Intercept beforehand, not cover blame afterward.
Have you ever wondered this: you put several hundred thousand into a DeFi vault—who can guarantee the money won’t be transferred around recklessly? The answer is absurd—no one. Right now, the execution logic of on-chain finance is “code runs as written,” with no “authorization” step. Your vault strategy, risk-control rules, and compliance checks either live in Excel, or rely on multi-sig approvals from Telegram groups. Over the past year, the vault track attracted billions of dollars, but risk controls are still stuck in human operations. This isn’t a conspiracy—that’s just the fact. Traditional finance isn’t like this. When you swipe your card, Visa performs a full set of checks at millisecond speed—whether the card is valid, whether the limit is sufficient, whether the transaction is suspicious—everything must pass before it’s allowed. Before that money even moves, the decision has already been made. What on-chain finance lacks is that layer. What Newton Protocol is doing: before each on-chain transaction settles, it forcibly enforces predefined strategies—compliant signatures pass, and non-compliant ones are rejected. This isn’t post-hoc auditing; it’s pre-transaction interception. The four enforcement domains cover every critical scenario: Compliance (OFAC/sanctions screening, Chainalysis endorsement), Identity (verification and eligibility checks), Security (real-time threat interception, Hexagate endorsement), Risk (counterparties, APY, leverage, oracle health, RedStone + Credora endorsement). The underlying security infrastructure is provided by EigenLayer, Succinct, and Rhinestone. Core developer Magic Labs—the inventors of embedded wallets, backed by PayPal Ventures—built with 57 million wallets, 200,000 developers, and the wallet infrastructure for Polymarket. This team wasn’t assembled to run experiments. Mainnet Beta is already live—starting from vaults, extending into RWA, stablecoins, and AI agents. The end state is a “strategy internet”—standardizing the authorization layer for on-chain finance. Not exaggerating, this is the watershed moment for DeFi to go from “it runs, so it works” to “it’s safe enough to put big money in.” @NewtonProtocol $NEWT #Newt
#newt $NEWT The biggest blind spot in DeFi: before transaction execution, nobody checks permissions. Your vault, your strategy, your money—code just moves it when it says so, with risk-control rules living in Excel spreadsheets and Telegram groups. Newton Protocol Mainnet Beta is live, processing every transaction
The biggest blind spot in DeFi: before a transaction is executed, no one checks permissions. Your vault, your strategy, your money—code moves it as soon as it’s written, while risk controls live in Excel sheets and Telegram groups. Launched on the Newton Protocol Mainnet Beta, for every transaction