When I first learned about $FOGO , the standout feature was latency. Sub-100ms consensus, SVM compatibility, based on Firedancer. For traders, these factors sound very "on point".

But after reading @Fogo Official's documentation more closely, my perspective changed. It wasn't speed that made me rethink. It was a building block of the product: Sessions.

If you want on-chain trading to feel like a traditional trading floor, half the story is speed. The other half is permission. How can users act quickly without sacrificing full control of their wallets?

Most DeFi today puts users in a rather crude trade-off. Either sign each transaction one by one. Slow, error-prone, tiring. Or give blanket approval and hope nothing goes wrong. Especially for new users, the act of "approving indefinitely" is almost a blind action.

Fogo's Sessions go towards scoped delegation. Users sign once to open a session. Within the predefined time and actions, the application can execute without requiring re-signing each step. At the end of the session, the rights terminate.

Sounds simple. But in terms of mindset, this is a significant change. Wallets are no longer machines that "ask for permission each time", but become a temporary permission granting system, similar to how modern applications handle access tokens. If I had to name it, I would call it "speed-limited permission". @FOGO #fogo