#genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial
Most people entered crypto because they wanted freedom.
No banks in the middle. No platform controlling your money. Just you and your wallet.
And honestly, DeFi did change the game.
Self-custody gave users real ownership for the first time.
But the deeper people go on-chain, the weirder one problem starts to feel:
Why is everything so visible?
Every swap, every position, every farming strategy, every wallet rotation… all public.
Sometimes it feels like the moment a smart wallet buys something, trackers and bots appear seconds later.
Is that really the future we wanted for Web3?
We talk a lot about decentralization, but almost nobody talks enough about privacy.
And now users are doing way more than simple swaps.
People are staking across chains, automating strategies, managing multiple wallets, farming yields, trading from terminals all day long.
A terminal is no longer just a chart screen.
It’s basically the control center of a user’s entire on-chain life.
So the real question becomes:
Should every move inside that system be visible to everyone?
Because transparency sounds good in theory… until your activity becomes data for bots, trackers, and random strangers watching wallets all day.
That’s why I think privacy infrastructure will become one of the most important narratives in Web3.
And honestly, this is why projects like Genius are starting to make more sense to me.
Not just another trading platform — but a private on-chain terminal built for people who don’t want every action exposed publicly.
In the future, I don’t think users will only care about speed and low fees.
They’ll care about something simpler:
Can I operate on-chain comfortably without feeling watched all the time?
What do you think?
Is full transparency actually good for Web3 users?
Or did crypto accidentally normalize financial surveillance?