There's a fundamental gap worth exploring here. One question is whether Aave Labs owes fiduciary responsibilities to the Aave DAO itself. But that's just the starting point—the real puzzle is whether Aave DAO even has legal recourse if things go sideways. Two completely different animals. The first asks about duty; the second asks about remedy. Both matter massively for how decentralized protocols actually function in practice.
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PebbleHander
· 12-19 01:47
Isn't this just a dead loop? With clear responsibility, no one dares to compensate, and legal remedies are nowhere to be found... Web3 still has to rely on self-regulation.
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NFTDreamer
· 12-18 04:49
Basically, it's a lack of clear rights and responsibilities. DAO is still a tangled mess legally.
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MemeTokenGenius
· 12-16 02:55
Oh, this is the most heartbreaking part of Web3... Obligation ≠ Relief, they are two different things.
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LiquidationHunter
· 12-16 02:54
Basically, it's a matter of power and relief. Aave is indeed complicated.
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LiquidityNinja
· 12-16 02:46
Basically, it's a legal black hole for decentralized protocols. The Aave issue can't be avoided at all.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 12-16 02:42
Damn, this is the real issue... What should I do if Aave Labs has run away?
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BagHolderTillRetire
· 12-16 02:36
To be honest, this is the most awkward part of DeFi right now... duty is in place, but what about remedy? Is it just air?
There's a fundamental gap worth exploring here. One question is whether Aave Labs owes fiduciary responsibilities to the Aave DAO itself. But that's just the starting point—the real puzzle is whether Aave DAO even has legal recourse if things go sideways. Two completely different animals. The first asks about duty; the second asks about remedy. Both matter massively for how decentralized protocols actually function in practice.