I keep seeing people describe crypto as an information game, but lately it feels more like an attention game.
The fastest accounts, the loudest narratives, the most watched wallets — everything competes for attention. The strange part is that having more information doesn’t always lead to better decisions.
That thought is what pulled me toward looking deeper at @GeniusOfficial.
What interests me about Genius isn't simply the technology. It's the idea that traders may eventually value controlled execution environments as much as they value market data itself. We’ve spent years building tools that expose everything. Now it feels like the industry is beginning to ask whether constant visibility comes with hidden costs.
When every move can be monitored, copied, or interpreted by thousands of people, trading becomes something different. Strategy starts blending with performance.
Projects focused on improving the environment around decision-making are becoming increasingly relevant in my view. Not because they promise shortcuts, but because they recognize a problem many active participants already feel.
Maybe the next evolution of crypto infrastructure isn't about seeing more. Maybe it's about knowing what deserves attention in the first place.