The more I look at Genius Terminal, the less I see a trading platform and the more I see an experiment in delegated execution.
Traditional on chain trading requires users to approve every action. That creates security, but it also creates friction. In fast moving markets, friction has a cost.
What Genius is exploring is a different model: users define permissions, limits, and rules upfront, then execution happens automatically within those boundaries.
The interesting part is that trust doesn’t disappear it moves. Instead of trusting individual transactions, users must trust the permission framework they’ve created. That makes automation powerful, but only as safe as the rules behind it.
The real challenge isn’t automation itself. It’s making risk controls, permissions, and execution logic understandable enough for everyday users while remaining reliable under network stress.
Genius Terminal may be more than a trading interface. It could be part of a broader shift from manual on chain interaction toward rule based financial systems.
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