@GeniusOfficial I noticed the problem in a pretty ordinary moment. A route was finally available, price was moving, and the wallet prompt felt almost too easy. No fresh friction, no long interruption, just a quick path toward execution. That usually feels like progress. But what struck me was that part of the smoothness was coming from decisions made much earlier, approvals I probably would not have remembered without stopping to look.
That is where this gets interesting to me with Genius. People usually judge a trading system by visible things: speed, routing, fills, slippage, whether the interface stays calm when the market does not.
I get that. But in fast conditions, a wallet can carry old permissions into a new decision, and the trade still looks clean on the surface.
The danger is not dramatic. It is quiet. You feel in control because you still hold your keys, while the approval history underneath is doing more than you are actively thinking about.
So when I think about Genius Token, I do not only think about faster execution. I think about whether a serious non-custodial terminal can keep speed without training users to ignore permission memory. That feels like the harder test. If markets keep getting faster, old approvals may become one of the most important risks people stop seeing.
#genius $GENIUS