# ChaosLabsExitsAaveDAO

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#AAVE换币风波 50 million dollars, one transaction, $36,000 received — Aave's March nightmare doesn't end here
On March 12, someone used $50.4 million USDT to swap for AAVE tokens on the Aave interface. Final amount received: 324 AAVE, worth approximately $36,000. One transaction, 99.93% evaporated. Not a hacker attack, not a contract vulnerability, not even a rug pull. The protocol's response: the system is operating as designed. But this is just the latest chapter of Aave's March nightmare.
Over the past 12 days, DeFi's largest lending protocol has experienced four consecutive incidents. $26.5 b
AAVE-3,02%
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Ryakpandavip
#AAVE换币风波 50 million dollars, one transaction, $36,000 received — Aave's March nightmare doesn't end here
On March 12, someone used $50.4 million USDT to swap for AAVE tokens on the Aave interface. Final amount received: 324 AAVE, worth approximately $36,000. One transaction, 99.93% evaporated. Not a hacker attack, not a contract vulnerability, not even a rug pull. The protocol's response: the system is operating as designed. But this is just the latest chapter of Aave's March nightmare.
Over the past 12 days, DeFi's largest lending protocol has experienced four consecutive incidents. $26.5 billion TVL, cumulative lending just breaking $100 billion. Then the chain of failures began.
What happened with that $50 million transaction
Let me clarify the flow first.
A user initiated an action on the official Aave interface, swapping aEthUSDT (yield-bearing USDT on Aave) for aEthAAVE. The interface integrated CoW Swap for routing, with the final order directed to SushiSwap for execution.
The problem: a single order of $50.4 million far exceeded the on-chain liquidity available for AAVE. Imagine taking $50 million in cash to a small-cap market with only a few million in daily trading volume to sweep up purchases. You'd push the price to the moon yourself, paying more for each token than the last. This is slippage.
A slippage warning appeared on the Aave interface, requiring user confirmation. The user checked the box.
Then MEV robots arrived. On-chain profit distribution data:
• User received: 324 AAVE, approximately $36,000
• CoW Swap fees: approximately $619,000
• MEV robot: approximately $9.9 million
• Block builder: approximately $34 million
The block builder took the largest slice. This isn't a bug; it's the normal operation of Ethereum's MEV ecosystem. It's just that no one usually demonstrates it with $50 million.
Aave founder Stani Kulechov said on X that the team would contact the trader and refund approximately $600,000 in fees that Aave collected.
$600,000 refunded for a $50 million loss.
12 days of consecutive failures
If just one transaction went wrong, that would be the user's issue. But looking at the timeline, Aave's March has been a disaster film.
March 1: Aave Labs proposed the "Aave Will Win" budget plan, requesting the DAO allocate $51 million USDC plus 75,000 AAVE tokens. The vote barely passed. ACI founder Marc Zeller publicly accused Aave Labs of self-voting and excessive voting power concentration, with independent oversight being merely ceremonial.
March 3: ACI announced its exit from the Aave ecosystem within four months. ACI was one of the most active forces in Aave's governance system, handling proposal advancement, community coordination, and risk assessment.
Even worse, BGD Labs also announced its departure in April. BGD Labs developed Aave V3, the main version currently supporting $26.5 billion TVL. Two core contributors departing simultaneously, with criticism pointing to the same issue: Aave Labs had too much concentrated power in governance.
Stani's response was "the DAO is not dead, but needs to evolve," advocating for simplified governance and improved efficiency. Sounds reasonable. But critics interpret it as: using "efficiency" as a pretext to reclaim power.
March 10: The oracle failed. Aave's CAPO system had a configuration error, with snapshot ratios and timestamps inconsistent, causing wstETH to be undervalued by 2.85%. In a lending protocol, 2.85% is enough to push healthy positions below the liquidation line. Approximately 34 user positions were wrongly liquidated, totaling $27 million. Chaos Labs fixed it that day and refunded 345 ETH. But this was an error in Aave's own risk management tool, not a third party's fault.
Then came March 12's $50 million transaction.
Governance, development, oracle, trading interface. In 12 days, four layers, all had problems.
Looking ahead
Stani said the DAO needs to evolve.
What's the direction?
If "evolution" means Aave Labs gaining more control and reducing community checks, that's going from decentralization back to centralization. A protocol managing $26.5 billion in assets taking this path could have costs greater than low governance efficiency.
If "evolution" means establishing a more professional framework, such as an independent security committee, binding contributor agreements, and more transparent budget audits, then the direction is right. But it requires time, and Aave is shortest on time right now.
V4 is still under audit. Core teams are departing. The oracle just failed. Users just lost $50 million.
Aave as a protocol won't collapse; the technical foundation and market position are solid. But if the governance problem doesn't find a new balance in the next two or three months, token prices will face continued pressure. The protocol can survive technical failures, can survive user mistakes, but what it can't survive is core teams no longer trusting each other.
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ShainingMoonvip:
To The Moon 🌕
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#AAVE换币风波 Today marks day 632 of my daily posts, without a single day missed. Each one is carefully prepared, never rushed. [微笑]If you think I'm a serious person, you're welcome to follow along, and I hope the daily content helps you. The world is vast, and I am small—follow me so you don't have trouble finding me. [微笑][微笑]
Just days ago, a "silent accident" happened in the DeFi world. Someone tried to exchange 50.4 million USDT for AAVE tokens on the AAVE interface. How much did they end up with? 324 AAVE tokens, worth approximately $36,000. In one transaction, 99.93% of assets evaporated. T
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ThisNameIsn_tBad.vip:
🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
Aunt's Early Market Analysis
From the 4-hour technical pattern perspective, Aunt's price movement shows obvious signs of fatigue. Currently, the coin price has broken below the short-term boundary of the Bollinger Band midline, and is overall trading in the weaker lower-middle band zone, indicating that short-term selling pressure is relatively heavy.
At the same time, observing the moving average system, the 4-hour MA lines (5 and 10 periods) have formed a downward turning resistance pattern. The current rebound lacks strength and remains trapped below the short-term moving averages, which me
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This is not a playground, but a real battlefield where outcomes are decided.
In this market, opportunities and risks coexist. Seize them, and it could be a chance to change your trajectory; miss them, and you can only continue to tread water. Often, the gap between people comes down to a single correct choice.
Trading is never just cold numbers fluctuating—it's more like a door opening to the life you've always wanted.
The opportunity is right in front of you. The real test is whether you dare to take this step and whether you have the courage to persevere until the end.
Where are those dreame
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3.15 Bitcoin and Ethereum Intraday Analysis
From a daily chart perspective, the bulls over these past few days have been displaying a typical "shuffling climb," inching upward bit by bit. After the price broke through the Bollinger Band midline, it has been hovering between the mid and upper bands. The rhythm looks stable, but in reality, the explosive power of the upward attack is not strong. Although Friday's long wick briefly pierced the resistance above and looked impressive, it was more of a probe without truly opening up the space above.
The suppression around the previous 74,000 level r
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#AAVE换币风波 #AAVE换币风波 $50 Million, One Trade, $36,000 in Hand—Aave's March Nightmare Doesn't Stop There
On March 12, someone traded $50.4 million in USDT for AAVE tokens on the Aave interface. Final result: 324 AAVE tokens worth approximately $36,000. One trade, 99.93% evaporated. Not a hack, not a contract vulnerability, not even a rug pull. The protocol's response: the system operated as designed. But this was just the latest chapter in Aave's March nightmare.
Over the past 12 days, DeFi's largest lending protocol has encountered four consecutive incidents. $26.5 billion in TVL, with cumulati
AAVE-3,02%
DEFI6,98%
COW-0,42%
SUSHI-1,12%
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Ryakpandavip
#AAVE换币风波 50 million dollars, one transaction, $36,000 received — Aave's March nightmare doesn't end here
On March 12, someone used $50.4 million USDT to swap for AAVE tokens on the Aave interface. Final amount received: 324 AAVE, worth approximately $36,000. One transaction, 99.93% evaporated. Not a hacker attack, not a contract vulnerability, not even a rug pull. The protocol's response: the system is operating as designed. But this is just the latest chapter of Aave's March nightmare.
Over the past 12 days, DeFi's largest lending protocol has experienced four consecutive incidents. $26.5 billion TVL, cumulative lending just breaking $100 billion. Then the chain of failures began.
What happened with that $50 million transaction
Let me clarify the flow first.
A user initiated an action on the official Aave interface, swapping aEthUSDT (yield-bearing USDT on Aave) for aEthAAVE. The interface integrated CoW Swap for routing, with the final order directed to SushiSwap for execution.
The problem: a single order of $50.4 million far exceeded the on-chain liquidity available for AAVE. Imagine taking $50 million in cash to a small-cap market with only a few million in daily trading volume to sweep up purchases. You'd push the price to the moon yourself, paying more for each token than the last. This is slippage.
A slippage warning appeared on the Aave interface, requiring user confirmation. The user checked the box.
Then MEV robots arrived. On-chain profit distribution data:
• User received: 324 AAVE, approximately $36,000
• CoW Swap fees: approximately $619,000
• MEV robot: approximately $9.9 million
• Block builder: approximately $34 million
The block builder took the largest slice. This isn't a bug; it's the normal operation of Ethereum's MEV ecosystem. It's just that no one usually demonstrates it with $50 million.
Aave founder Stani Kulechov said on X that the team would contact the trader and refund approximately $600,000 in fees that Aave collected.
$600,000 refunded for a $50 million loss.
12 days of consecutive failures
If just one transaction went wrong, that would be the user's issue. But looking at the timeline, Aave's March has been a disaster film.
March 1: Aave Labs proposed the "Aave Will Win" budget plan, requesting the DAO allocate $51 million USDC plus 75,000 AAVE tokens. The vote barely passed. ACI founder Marc Zeller publicly accused Aave Labs of self-voting and excessive voting power concentration, with independent oversight being merely ceremonial.
March 3: ACI announced its exit from the Aave ecosystem within four months. ACI was one of the most active forces in Aave's governance system, handling proposal advancement, community coordination, and risk assessment.
Even worse, BGD Labs also announced its departure in April. BGD Labs developed Aave V3, the main version currently supporting $26.5 billion TVL. Two core contributors departing simultaneously, with criticism pointing to the same issue: Aave Labs had too much concentrated power in governance.
Stani's response was "the DAO is not dead, but needs to evolve," advocating for simplified governance and improved efficiency. Sounds reasonable. But critics interpret it as: using "efficiency" as a pretext to reclaim power.
March 10: The oracle failed. Aave's CAPO system had a configuration error, with snapshot ratios and timestamps inconsistent, causing wstETH to be undervalued by 2.85%. In a lending protocol, 2.85% is enough to push healthy positions below the liquidation line. Approximately 34 user positions were wrongly liquidated, totaling $27 million. Chaos Labs fixed it that day and refunded 345 ETH. But this was an error in Aave's own risk management tool, not a third party's fault.
Then came March 12's $50 million transaction.
Governance, development, oracle, trading interface. In 12 days, four layers, all had problems.
Looking ahead
Stani said the DAO needs to evolve.
What's the direction?
If "evolution" means Aave Labs gaining more control and reducing community checks, that's going from decentralization back to centralization. A protocol managing $26.5 billion in assets taking this path could have costs greater than low governance efficiency.
If "evolution" means establishing a more professional framework, such as an independent security committee, binding contributor agreements, and more transparent budget audits, then the direction is right. But it requires time, and Aave is shortest on time right now.
V4 is still under audit. Core teams are departing. The oracle just failed. Users just lost $50 million.
Aave as a protocol won't collapse; the technical foundation and market position are solid. But if the governance problem doesn't find a new balance in the next two or three months, token prices will face continued pressure. The protocol can survive technical failures, can survive user mistakes, but what it can't survive is core teams no longer trusting each other.
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Crypto_Buzz_with_Alexvip:
Great Post as always with great knowledge.
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#AAVE换币风波 50 million dollars, one transaction, $36,000 received — Aave's March nightmare doesn't end here
On March 12, someone used $50.4 million USDT to swap for AAVE tokens on the Aave interface. Final amount received: 324 AAVE, worth approximately $36,000. One transaction, 99.93% evaporated. Not a hacker attack, not a contract vulnerability, not even a rug pull. The protocol's response: the system is operating as designed. But this is just the latest chapter of Aave's March nightmare.
Over the past 12 days, DeFi's largest lending protocol has experienced four consecutive incidents. $26.5 b
AAVE-3,02%
ETH-1,04%
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CryptoBGsvip:
Volatility is an opportunity 📊
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Web3 Daily Brief
2026-03-14
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Today's market experienced severe volatility as escalating geopolitical tensions between Iran and the United States triggered a 3.5% Bitcoin decline, resulting in over $415 million in liquidations. Despite this, institutional demand remains robust, with BlackRock continuing to accumulate positions, and Donald Trump planning to host a major cryptocurrency event next month. For security-conscious users, Aave's $50 million swap loss and a 612% surge in "address poisoning" scams underscore the necessity of strict verification during on-chain
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AAVE Token Swap Controversy: Growing Pains of DeFi Projects
If we compare DeFi projects to startups, Aave is now at a typical stage: the product is mature, but the economic model needs rethinking.
The token swap discussion actually stems from a very realistic problem—as the protocol scales grow larger, can the token's functionality still fully match the needs?
In early DeFi, many tokens primarily served governance and incentive functions. But as ecosystems expand, projects often need more complex mechanisms, such as security modules, liquidity incentives, and cross-chain ecosystems.
This is wh
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# When DeFi Meets Tokenomics: AAVE's "System Update Notification"
Many people's first reaction to hearing about AAVE's token swap is like a computer popping up an update notification: "Update now, or remind me later?"
In the Aave community, this question clearly doesn't have a simple answer.
Supporters of the upgrade believe that if the protocol continues to evolve but the token structure remains stuck in an old version, it could limit ecosystem expansion in the future.
Opponents, meanwhile, worry about a practical reality: the market often doesn't distinguish between "upgrades" and "risks."
I
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ybaservip:
To The Moon 🌕
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