Delegated Trading and the Risk Boundary
Genius Terminal is trying to change how trading permissions work.
Most trading systems still depend on users approving actions again and again. Genius Terminal takes a different path.
Its programmable key pair model allows delegated execution within rules already set by the user. The wallet still controls the assets. The delegated key only handles execution inside predefined limits.
This turns trading into a session-layer trust problem. The important part is not just ownership. It is how much authority gets delegated and how safely those permissions are scoped.
The role of $GENIUS sits around this system. It may be used for access, fees, or governance depending on the interaction. The full token design is still something worth examining more closely.
The bigger question is what happens when users create loose parameters.
Delegated systems are only as strong as the limits users configure. Many users are not careful with risk settings. That creates room for mistakes, abuse, or unintended exposure.
Because of that, developer tooling matters a lot. Clear permission controls, readable session scopes, and safer default settings could become critical pieces of the product.
The next thing worth watching is whether the system can handle real trading volume without major exploits. Infrastructure always looks strong during quiet periods. Stress conditions reveal the real architecture.
If the platform proves stable under load and makes delegated permissions simple for non-technical users, Genius Terminal could become an important model for autonomous trading infrastructure.
The core idea behind the architecture is genuinely interesting.
