#newt $NEWT
The more I think about institutional adoption, the less I believe the biggest challenge is throughput or transaction costs. Those problems matter, but they're easier to solve than trust.
Large organizations don't just ask whether a transaction can happen. They ask whether it meets the rules that exist around their business. Those rules change over time as risks, regulations, and internal policies evolve.
That makes me wonder if the next phase of blockchain infrastructure is less about writing smarter contracts and moreabout creating systems that can adapt their decision-making without replacing the foundation beneath them.
Projects like Newton are exploring that direction by separating business logic from execution, making onchain systems more flexible as requirements change.
If blockchain is going to support global financial infrastructure, should adaptability become just as important as decentralization?
@NewtonProtocol
The more I think about institutional adoption, the less I believe the biggest challenge is throughput or transaction costs. Those problems matter, but they're easier to solve than trust.
Large organizations don't just ask whether a transaction can happen. They ask whether it meets the rules that exist around their business. Those rules change over time as risks, regulations, and internal policies evolve.
That makes me wonder if the next phase of blockchain infrastructure is less about writing smarter contracts and moreabout creating systems that can adapt their decision-making without replacing the foundation beneath them.
Projects like Newton are exploring that direction by separating business logic from execution, making onchain systems more flexible as requirements change.
If blockchain is going to support global financial infrastructure, should adaptability become just as important as decentralization?
@NewtonProtocol