Most discussions focus on executing onchain transactions. Newton Protocol focuses on authorizing them before execution.

Instead of relying on traditional API responses, Newton Protocol is designed to produce cryptographic attestations that prove a policy was evaluated and satisfied.

Its policy engine can evaluate transaction intents against programmable rules such as identity verification, sanctions screening, risk assessment, source-of-funds analysis, velocity limits, and investor eligibility.

The protocol is built around several core principles: verifiable rather than advisory, programmable rather than static, privacy-preserving rather than data-exposing, decentralized rather than single-vendor, cross-chain rather than siloed, and neutral rather than proprietary.

According to the whitepaper, Newton Protocol is not a blockchain, not a wallet, and not a centralized compliance vendor. It is designed as a neutral, auditable authorization layer that bridges offchain compliance with onchain enforcement through cryptographic proofs.

$NEWT @NewtonProtocol #Newt