#newt $NEWT @NewtonProtocol
I almost added more to my small $NEWT position yesterday, then stopped because I realized I still wasn't sure what part of the protocol actually mattered most. After digging deeper, I think I was looking at the wrong thing.

Most people focus on blockchain execution, but execution only happens after a decision has already been made. Newton Protocol made me think about that layer differently. Instead of leaving authorization and policy checks outside the network, it explores making those decisions verifiable before a transaction is executed.

That sounds subtle, but I think it changes how on-chain applications could be designed. If every permission and condition becomes transparent instead of hidden inside an app's backend, users can verify not just what happened, but why it was allowed to happen.

I'm still keeping my position small for now, but this idea feels more interesting to me than simply shaving another second off transaction speed.