The more I study $NEWT , the more convinced I become that we're looking at a shift far bigger than another infrastructure upgrade.

I keep asking myself one question:

What happens when AI not humans starts moving billions of dollars on-chain?

A valid signature proves who approved a transaction.

It doesn't prove the transaction follows treasury rules, governance policies, spending limits, compliance requirements, or risk controls.

That's the gap.

And it's a gap most of the industry still underestimates.

What caught my attention about Newton Protocol isn't that it's trying to replace wallets or custody. It's introducing a programmable policy layer that evaluates transactions before execution.

That changes everything.

Imagine AI agents operating with predefined boundaries: spending caps, approved counterparties, jurisdiction filters, protocol-specific rules, and execution limits—all enforced automatically.

To me, this isn't just better security.

It's a new security model.

Web3 has spent years proving ownership through cryptography.

The next chapter may be about proving intent.

If autonomous finance is the future, then every authorized action should also prove it complies with the rules that matter.

That's why I believe the protocols defining programmable trust not just programmable money could become the most important infrastructure of the AI era.

$NEWT is one project I'm watching very closely.

#newt $NEWT @NewtonProtocol