Today the whole network is spreading this image (see attached),

This is an 'epic tragedy' that happened on March 12th on Aave. A giant whale wanted to exchange 50 million dollars worth of coins, but because he didn't see the warning clearly, he forced it under extremely high slippage, resulting in 360 million yuan going in, only to get back 30,000 yuan worth of stuff.

Many people are laughing at this guy for being foolish, but Brother Niu saw the cold sweat all over his back. This isn't a giant whale being foolish; this is the 'old human' operational logic completely hitting a wall in the millisecond-level game on the chain world.

1. Why is 'man' no longer suitable for charging into battle in Web3?

Look at the left side of this picture, Aave founder Stani came out to explain: The system actually jumped out a red warning, prompting him to confirm, but this guy confirmed with a fumble on his mobile.

Brother Niu puts it plainly: In this 'dark forest' of Web3, human impatience, inability to understand English, and even just a small phone screen can lead you to instant bankruptcy. You think you are operating a wallet, but in the eyes of machines, you are just a walking big gift package.

2. Exclusive perspective: #ROBO Can the 'Executor' save lives?

Everyone has been talking about the AI narrative of ROBO (Fabric Protocol) lately, but I noticed a point that most people haven't observed: its machine identity registration and executor logic are secretly solving this 'slippage disaster'.

If yesterday's giant whale didn't press the button on the Aave front end herself, but instead entrusted it to an Agent in the ROBO ecosystem to run:

• Agents do not understand 'impulsiveness': In the underlying code logic of Agents, you can write: 'If slippage exceeds 0.5%, directly refuse to sign and trigger a network-wide warning.' Intent-driven: We don't need to care about whether Aave or Uniswap has a deeper liquidity pool. Agents will automatically scan the entire network routes to find the most stable path. The operation of giant whales crashing into a wall is seen by Agents as a 'program error' and simply won't work.

3. In-depth exploration @Fabric Foundation recent changes: Do machines also have 'identity cards'? 🆔

I noticed that ROBO recently landed a major task in Q1: Machine Identity Registration.

What is the use of this thing? In the future, every Agent that helps you work and avoid pitfalls will have its own 'passport' on the chain.

With the certificate, machines can establish **'credit scores'**. If an Agent helps you avoid a major slippage pit like yesterday's 360 million, its credit will skyrocket. The competition in future Web3 is no longer about who is faster, but who has a more experienced 'machine bodyguard'.

4. Brother Niu's musings: Don't think of Agents as mere tools for issuing tokens; they are your 'bulletproof vests' 🛡️

Yesterday's 360 million RMB tuition actually taught humanity a lesson: In this era filled with arbitrage robots, manual operations have become the biggest security vulnerability.

$ROBO The current hotspot is not how much it has risen, but rather that its 'machine escort' logic is becoming a necessity.

Finally, Brother Niu asks: If you had 50 million USD in your hands, would you dare to bet that you would never fumble, or would you prefer to have a 'machine bodyguard' help you watch the slippage?

See you in the comments section, Brother Niu will continue to expose the hidden rules of the Agent era! #robo