Crypto has quietly changed the way markets work.

Every transaction today is more than just a trade. The moment it happens, bots, analysts, and algorithms start analyzing it, trying to figure out what it means and what others will think it means.

In many cases, the reaction to the interpretation becomes bigger than the trade itself.

That's why I find Genius Terminal interesting.

It's not about hiding activity. It's about creating a small gap between execution and the stories people instantly build around it. A brief moment where an action can exist without being immediately labeled, decoded, and turned into a market signal.

At first that delay feels unusual. Then you realize how strange the opposite has become—where every move is instantly transformed into a narrative.

A lot of crypto no longer responds directly to buying and selling. It responds to expectations, assumptions, and predictions about how others will react.

The market becomes a feedback loop of people interpreting other people's interpretations.

When that cycle speeds up, liquidity starts acting less like capital and more like collective speculation about future behavior.

Maybe the real innovation isn't privacy or transparency.

Maybe it's giving meaning a little more time before it spreads.

Because if every trade isn't instantly turned into a shared story, what is the market actually following—fundamentals, timing, or simply the attention of the crowd?

@GeniusOfficial #genius $GENIUS