TLDR
- Dan Finlay said April 23 was his last day at Consensys after more than ten years.
- Finlay said burnout led to his decision to leave the company.
- He said he plans to spend more time with his family.
- Finlay pointed to MetaMask Advanced Permissions as a recent product milestone.
- ERC-7715 lets dApps execute approved actions within limits set by users.
MetaMask co-founder Dan Finlay has left Consensys after more than ten years with the company. He said burnout drove the decision, and he plans to spend more time with his family.
Finlay shared the news on X on April 23. His departure comes as MetaMask rolls out Advanced Permissions, a new feature tied to ERC-7715.
Finlay ends a long run at Consensys
Dan Finlay said Wednesday was his last day at Consensys. He wrote that he was leaving after a decade of work on MetaMask.
In his post on X, Finlay said burnout shaped his decision. He also said he wanted to spend more time with his family.
He added, “Wishing the team the best — they have an amazing road ahead of them”. The message marked the end of a long period at one of Ethereum’s best-known wallet teams.
MetaMask was created in 2016 by Finlay and Aaron Davis under Consensys. It grew into a widely used wallet for desktop browsers and mobile devices.
MetaMask grew beyond its early Ethereum roots
MetaMask began as an Ethereum wallet, but its reach later widened. The product added support for networks beyond the EVM, including Bitcoin and Tron.
The wallet also moved into more consumer services over time. It added access to prediction markets and tokenized stocks inside the platform.
Consensys also launched a MetaMask payment card with Mastercard. The card offers cashback paid in the native mUSD stablecoin.
These additions showed how MetaMask expanded beyond basic wallet use. At the same time, the product kept building tools for everyday onchain activity.
Advanced Permissions was a recent focus for Finlay
After announcing his exit, Finlay pointed to Advanced Permissions as a recent launch. The feature is based on ERC-7715 and gives users more control over app access.
Under the system, a user can approve a dApp to act within set limits. This reduces the need to approve every single transaction by hand.
MetaMask developer documents gave a practical example. They said a user could allow a dApp to spend 10 USDC each day to buy ETH.
The document said, “Once the permission is granted, your dapp can use the allocated 10 USDC each day to purchase ETH directly from the MetaMask user’s account”. That creates a path for recurring onchain actions under user-set rules.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, replied to Finlay’s post about the feature. He wrote, “Finally, the crypto market can offer something everyone has envied about Visa and Mastercard — recurring payment systems, which crypto hasn’t had”.
Finlay’s departure comes at a time when MetaMask is still adding new features and services. His exit closes a long chapter in the wallet’s development at Consensys.



