Spencer Dinwiddie expects his plan to monetize part of his contract into a digital investment vehicle will go through, with the NBA and Players Association approving it. Or more accurately, the Nets guard is confident they can’t stop it.

Dinwiddie will in essence sell bonds in himself to raise funds. The Players Association had no comment on Dinwiddie’s plans, and there have been questions about whether it could face long, drawn-out scrutiny from the league, although Dinwiddie wasn’t expecting it.

“What are they going to do, try and stop me? I mean, they could try,” Dinwiddie said. “Then they’d have to have legal standing to do so. Do you really want to do that? Because wouldn’t that be bad PR for them to do that? I would think. Then I’d start to look like [Colin] Kaepernick.

“Nothing I’m doing is illegal. I know there’s a lot of misinformation out there, like I’m trying to create a currency or something. I’m not trying to reinvent the wheel and create a new bitcoin; this is different. … I will say this, though: It solves some of the league’s fan engagement issue. It does do that.”

Dinwiddie — who was instrumental in recruiting Kyrie Irving, who in turn helped lure Kevin Durant to Brooklyn — was clearly amused by the NBA’s sudden new stance on tampering reform. The irony isn’t lost on him that the reforms came when the NBA’s second sons like the Nets and Clippers cleaned up in free agency.

“You mean when non-traditional powers like the Nets and the Clippers win?” Dinwiddie laughed. “What you’re saying is, if it’d been the Lakers and the Knicks that won it wouldn’t be a problem, but because it’s the Clippers and the Nets that won it’s an issue? You said it, not me.”

The Nets unveiled a redesign of their home court at Barclays Center on Monday. The colors — weathered wood and concrete gray — represent playground courts and Brooklyn’s industrial foundation.

At this point last season, the Nets were buzzing over the strides Caris LeVert had made. Now Dinwiddie tabbed newcomer Taurean Prince as the most likely to take a leap forward.

“He’s going to be a pleasant surprise, somebody a lot of people are discounting,” Dinwiddie said of Prince , who has shot 39 and 38.5 from 3 the past two years. “[He] can really, really, really shoot it.”

The Nets got the rights to Deng Adel and JaKaar Sampson in a three-way deal that cost them the returning rights to J.J. Moore and Milton Doyle.

Brooklyn inked Adel to an Exhibit 10 contract back in July, but now if he gets cut he’ll go to G-League Long Island as a returning player. Sampson, who has played 178 NBA games, is currently on the books with Indiana. If the Pacers cut him, his G-League rights go to Long Island.

The Nets haven’t commented on Rodions Kurucs after the Latvian got charged with assault. Both Dzanan Musa — his best friend on the team — and Dinwiddie declined to talk specifics but stood by Kurucs.

Brooklyn promoted Tiago Splitter to player development coach and Ryan Forehan-Kelly took the role of player development coordinator. They added J.R. Holden as director of player personnel and Daniel Jones as physical performance coach.