I spent some time going through Genius Terminal, and the thing I kept coming back to was the word “private.”
In crypto, we talk a lot about transparency, but most people don’t actually want every step of their thinking exposed. The trades, the research, the checks, the half-formed ideas before a decision is made — that stuff matters.
That’s what made Genius interesting to me. It isn’t just about putting actions on-chain. It’s about asking where privacy should sit in the process before something becomes final.
And honestly, that feels like a more realistic way to think about on-chain tools.
If everything becomes visible eventually, the real question might be: how much of the journey should be visible too?

