U.S. Treasury just published recommendations for the stablecoin industry. The proposed rule implementing the GENIUS Act doesn't just require AML programs and sanctions screening on paper. It explicitly demands "technical capabilities" to block, freeze, and reject violating transactions on both primary and secondary markets.
That means if your stablecoin is trading on a DEX, moving through a bridge, or sitting as collateral in a lending protocol, you need enforcement at the transaction layer, not a compliance team reviewing alerts after the fact.
You can't whitelist every downstream venue without turning your stablecoin into a closed-loop token nobody wants to integrate. The industry needs authorization infrastructure that enforces programmable policies at the smart contract layer before settlement, produces cryptographic proof of compliance for every transaction, and works across chains without centralized gatekeeping.
That's the infrastructure problem Newton Protocol was built to solve. The era of compliance theater is ending. Regulators want proof your controls actually work, not a policy document saying they exist.
$NEWT
