
Genius Terminal has deployed its Gh0st privacy stack on BNB Chain, introducing a trading infrastructure tool designed to obscure on-chain activity from public observers while remaining verifiable by regulators.
The system routes trade execution through multiple intermediate wallets, breaking the visible link between a user’s primary wallet and their actual trading activity. Orders are fragmented and distributed across dozens of addresses, making it significantly harder for outside parties to track positions or replicate strategies through copy trading.
The mechanism separates a user’s identity from their execution pathway. Rather than trading directly from a primary wallet, orders pass through intermediate routing addresses before reaching the market. The private keys for each wallet remain under the user’s local control throughout the process.
The effect is that positions and trading intent become difficult to observe from the outside, while the underlying transactions remain recorded on the blockchain and accessible to regulators for compliance verification.
Genius Terminal describes this as compliant privacy, a distinction it draws deliberately from traditional privacy tools that aim for complete anonymity. The company’s stated position is that privacy should mean protection from public observation, not removal from the ledger entirely.
“Privacy should not mean opacity,” the team said in a statement. “It should mean protection.”
Copy trading, where participants mirror the on-chain activity of successful wallets in real time, has become a significant concern for sophisticated traders who find their strategies front-run or replicated before they can fully execute. By fragmenting orders across multiple wallets and pathways, Gh0st makes it substantially harder for copy trading bots and observers to identify and mirror positions as they are being built.
The project has received backing from YZi Labs and counts Binance co-founder CZ as an advisor. Gh0st’s token has already been listed on Binance Alpha and derivatives markets.
The launch arrives as regulators globally are paying increasing attention to privacy tools in the crypto space.
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