The team behind Aave, the leading decentralized lending platform, launches ‘Aave Shield’, a protection built into the exchange mechanism (exchange) Parts of that interface were removed following the March 12 incident in which a user exchanged $50 million in aEthUSDT tokens and received only $36,000 in aEthAAVE.
According to an after-action report released by Aave Labs on March 14th, Aave Shield (Aave Shield in Spanish) By default it blocks everything swap Price impact is greater than 25%. To operate at higher risk, users must enter the settings menu and manually disable protection.
Aave’s statement describes the feature as a “high-friction barrier that prevents false confirmations while preserving unauthorized operations for advanced users.”
Case study that inspired the new Aave feature
As reported by CriptoNoticias, the incident that prompted the launch was caused by a user Tried to purchase AAVE token for 50 million USDT Integrates CoW Swap, Aave’s primary exchange provider, through the Aave interface.
Aave engineer Martin Grabina explained that the problem was not technical. Because the order was so large compared to the available liquidity, the quote presented to the user was already very unfavorable before execution, and the price impact was 99.9%.
Aave Labs’ post-mortem statement corroborated Grabina’s statement. Before accepting a trade, the Aave interface provides users with a clear warning: “Price impact is significant (99.9%). Returns may be lower due to lower liquidity, as shown in the image below.”
To proceed, Aave explained, users had to check a box that explicitly states “Confirm swaps with a potential loss of 100% of value.” The user would have confirmed it.
According to a subsequent announcement from the CoW Swap platform, Further failures made the situation even worse.. In the CoW swap system, multiple algorithms compete in an auction to find the best execution path for each order. The algorithm with the best quote won two rounds in a row, but in both cases no transactions were executed on the network and no visible errors were recorded. After two failed attempts, the algorithm abandoned the order, leaving the route that provided the worst possible route as the only available choice.
Protocols that were supposed to be working and users who lost everything
Aave CEO Stani Kulechov said on March 12 that “a transaction cannot proceed unless the user explicitly accepts the risk.” Aave Labs has confirmed the following in a new report: Central protocols were never compromised and swap it happened outside of himvia CoW Swap.
Aave also guarantees to refund users $600,000 in fees charged on transactions. If you are contacted and pass the verification process. At the time of the statement, the user had not initiated contact.
This incident reveals structural tensions in DeFi design. This means that the protocol works exactly as designed and still produces devastating results For users who accept unfavorable conditions without understanding the actual scope. Aave Shield manages that tension rather than resolving it.

