---
title: "The exorbitant tuition fee of $50 million"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/279122556.md"
description: "A recent incident in the crypto community involved a large investor losing $50 million while attempting to buy AAVE tokens. The transaction resulted in only 324 AAVE tokens, worth about $37,000, due to a significant price shock. The Aave founder confirmed that the user ignored warnings about abnormal slippage. This event sparked debate over user responsibility versus product design flaws in DeFi protocols. Critics argue that the interface should prevent such costly mistakes, while others maintain that users must understand the risks involved in their transactions."
datetime: "2026-03-14T12:03:10.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/279122556.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/279122556.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/279122556.md)
---

# The exorbitant tuition fee of $50 million

Waking up, BTC is still hovering above $70,000. Some worry that $60,000 might be the bottom of this bear market. Some don't think so. Some win, some lose, some get rich, some cry.

A smooth little combo, tens of millions of dollars vanished into thin air. It's not that the lobster went crazy, but that ignorance ruined people. It sounds like dark humor, but if it happened to you, it would definitely hurt terribly.

Just on the 12th, a large investor attempted to buy AAVE tokens with 50 million USDT through the front-end interface of the well-known lending protocol Aave. The result? 50 million USD went in, and all they got were 324 AAVE—worth about $37,000. One transaction, and $49.96 million evaporated.

You read that right. Not $50,000, not $500,000, but $50 million! Here’s the proof: The news quickly ignited the crypto community. Aave founder Stani Kulechov confirmed the news on Twitter immediately\[1\]. According to him, the Aave interface, like all normal trading interfaces, gave a warning of “abnormal slippage” and asked the user to confirm it via a checkbox. The user confirmed the warning on his phone and then continued the transaction. In the end, he only got 324 AAVE\[1\]. The CoW Swap router was working properly and the integration followed industry standard practices. The problem was that the user was not accepting slippage, but a price shock of up to 99%—even after he had been warned and confirmed \[2\]. Let’s look at the numbers behind this heartbreaking deal\[3\]: - The arbitrageur (MEV robot) captured the huge price difference generated by the deal, making a profit of about $37 million. - To ensure priority in the transaction, the arbitrageur paid a bribe of $26 million to the block builder (Titan Builder). - The arbitrageur made a net profit of nearly $10 million. The unfortunate big spender could only watch his $50 million turn into $37,000. Aave stated that it would refund the $600,000 in fees collected—but this is a drop in the ocean compared to the $50 million loss\[3\]. Who is responsible? This incident sparked heated discussions in the community, with opinions roughly divided into two camps: One camp believes that DeFi is a neutral protocol, and users are responsible for their own actions. Code is law, and smart contracts execute transactions signed by users. Users who ignore warnings and force confirmation should bear the consequences. The other camp believes that there are problems with the product design. The UI should not allow users to easily ignore warnings and execute a transaction that could cause devastating losses. How can a checkbox be the last line of defense for $50 million? Both sides have their reasons. But let's take a more comprehensive look at the issues this incident has exposed. Indigo raised a key concept in his tweet—the knowledge gap \[4\]. The user was not trading ordinary AAVE, but aEthAAVE—an interest-bearing deposit certificate of Aave. Such assets have extremely poor liquidity in the open market. Did the user really understand this? Did he really understand what the slippage warning meant for such a illiquid trading pair? It's almost certain: he doesn't understand. That's the problem. DeFi interfaces show users the same percentage numbers, the same confirmation checkboxes. But the consequences are drastically different for a $500 transaction with 3% slippage and for a $50 million transaction with 99.9% slippage. In the user's eyes, they are just the same operation \[4\]. The lesson is, before we do anything in the crypto world, are we really 100% sure we understand the consequences we will face? Sometimes ignorance is bliss. Sometimes it's really hard. Some argue that this is the user's fault, as DeFi's design principle is permissionless and free trading. While we agree with this principle, this doesn't mean we should ignore product design issues. We've also had large sums of money locked on cross-chain bridges; fortunately, we waited patiently and the funds were eventually unfrozen, but we missed market opportunities. Although DeFi's decentralization and decoupling aim to eliminate warranty coverage for on-chain protocols, we should strive to provide users with more predictable consequences and warnings, improve operational predictability, and even prevent users from making irrational decisions. If a user insists on doing it, they should seek a more hardcore approach, such as writing the code themselves. A fundamental quality of a product is foolproof design. The industrial sector has long understood that if operational errors can cause significant losses, the problem cannot be solely attributed to the operator; one should reflect on why the system allows such error-prone operations to exist. Car manufacturers wouldn't design a checkbox requiring the driver to confirm pressing the accelerator instead of the brake. They would design the brake and accelerator to have different positions and feel, and even install systems to prevent accidental pressing. But what about DeFi? A checkbox became the last line of defense for $50 million. So, what would be a better safety barrier? The Aave team says they will study ways to improve protection \[1\]. After reading the community discussion, ChainChain thinks at least the following points should be considered \[4\]: ​​1. Display the dollar loss as a slippage warning, not just a percentage. When users see that a transaction could result in a loss of $49.6 million, the probability of their hands shaking will be greatly reduced, even if they are tapping the checkbox on their phone. 2. Set a hard limit on the transaction amount, requiring multiple confirmation steps if the amount exceeds a certain threshold, or even introducing a time delay. 3. Clearly distinguish between spot tokens and interest-bearing collateralized assets at the UI level, so users know exactly what they are trading. 4. The mobile user experience needs to be re-examined, especially for high-value transactions. A simple checkbox tapped on a phone screen should not be the sole safeguard for a $50 million transaction. After all, there is a structural inherent contradiction between the smoothness of user experience and the security of user operations. You can't have your cake and eat it too; you must find a balance. Behind this unfortunate event, lurking in the shadows, is a participant that cannot be ignored—the MEV bot. Even if you carefully confirm every transaction, as long as your large transactions enter the mempool, arbitrageurs have ways to snipe you. They will buy before you, making your transaction price worse, and then immediately sell to profit from the arbitrage. This is called a sandwich attack, and last year alone, MEV alone siphoned off more than $1.3 billion from DeFi users\[4\]. In this $50 million event, arbitrageurs netted nearly $10 million. Blockchain is transparent, but it's not fair—in the dark forest, the hunter lurking in the shadows, always ready to fire, always fires faster than the gunman who naively exposes himself. A final thought: DeFi's permissionless nature is a double-edged sword. It grants users complete freedom, but also exposes them to complete risk. Protocols will warn you, require confirmation, and then faithfully execute your instructions—even if those instructions instantly wipe out your wallet. That gap between warning and confirmation, that chasm between understanding and action, is where $50 million disappeared. Stani said that DeFi should remain open and permissionless, allowing users to trade freely, but at the same time the industry also needs to build more safeguards to better protect users\[1\]. This is an art of balance. It is necessary to maintain the core spirit of DeFi while avoiding ordinary users going bankrupt because of a mistake. Perhaps, this expensive lesson was paid not only to that big player, but also to the entire industry. For ordinary users, the biggest lesson of this story may be: before you click confirm, make sure you really understand what you are doing. For DeFi users, understanding aToken, slippage mechanism, liquidity depth and execution risk is no longer advanced knowledge, but the bottom line for survival\[4\]. After all, that checkbox is never a get-out-of-jail-free card.

References:

\[1\] Stani Kulechov, "Earlier today, a user attempted to buy AAVE using $50M USDT through the Aave interface...", X, Mar 13, 2026. \[Link\](https://x.com/StaniKulechov/status/2032193345414664659)

\[2\] martin, "After today's unfavorable $50M swap on our interface, there's a lot of confusion around slippage I'd like to clarify...", X, Mar 13, 2026. \[Link\](https://x.com/mgrabina/status/2032225132605833371)

\[3\] OdailyNews, "How many times do I have to say it, this world is just a huge makeshift operation...", X, Mar 13, 2026. \[Link\](https://x.com/OdailyChina/status/2032243323248030094)

\[4\] Indigo, "Someone just lost $50.4M on a DeFi swap...", X, Mar 13, 2026. \[Link\](https://x.com/UncleIndigo/status/2032215131531223500)

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