Picture a vault standing guard at the edge of a blockchain, holding a rulebook that everyone assumes will be obeyed. That rulebook only means something the moment it can trust what it's reading. This is the challenge @NewtonProtocol set out to solve when its mainnet beta went live turning what were once loose guidelines into rules the system actually enforces.
But a guard is only as good as its eyes. So @NewtonProtocol brought in two allies before the gates opened. RedStone became its eyes on the market, feeding it prices that couldn't be quietly nudged or manipulated. Credora became its judgment, whispering risk scores and collateral insights so the vault could tell a sound position from a shaky one.
Now imagine a moment of truth: a liquidation about to fire, or a real-world asset waiting for transfer approval. Before anything moves, the vault pauses. It checks RedStone's live price feed. It checks Credora's PSL score. Only then does it act.
That pause is the whole story. A policy can be written perfectly and still fail if it's reading bad data. What Newton built wasn't just automation, it was a way to make sure the automation was right, verified at the source, every single time.
