A few days ago I opened a small $GENIUS position.
Wasn’t even a conviction trade.
Just one of those things where you start clicking around a platform, reading docs, checking how it works, and suddenly end up thinking about something completely different. 😅
Everyone keeps talking about privacy in crypto from the user side.
Protecting wallets.
Protecting balances.
Protecting identity.
Fair enough.
But I keep thinking about what happens when the trader isn’t really a trader anymore.
What happens when most execution starts coming from bots, agents, automated strategies, or systems that don't care about narratives and just react to data.
Because at that point every on-chain move becomes information.
A good entry becomes a signal.
A wallet rotation becomes a signal.
Even liquidity movement becomes a signal.
The second something works, people start tracking it.
Then copying it.
Then fading it.
Then the edge slowly disappears.
That’s honestly what made Genius Terminal interesting to me.
Not because of the privacy narrative itself.
More because of the execution side.
Features like Ghost Orders seem less about hiding and more about reducing strategy leakage in public markets. The platform describes them as a way to split execution across multiple wallets and reduce visible order flow. ([tradegenius.com][1])
And if crypto eventually moves toward agent-driven trading at scale, that probably matters more than people think.
Most people focus on whether AI can make decisions.
I’m starting to think the bigger question is whether those decisions can stay efficient once the entire market can watch them happen in real time.
Maybe that's the next layer nobody is really paying attention to yet.
Just something I kept thinking about after opening the trade. 👀