PANews reported on May 29th that Aave Labs released an ARFC proposal, suggesting the establishment of a standardized technical asset listing framework for Aave V3, V4, and Aave Horizon, setting unified technical requirements for asset listing, parameter expansion, and continuous monitoring. The framework covers core areas such as ERC20 compatibility, oracles, access control, minting and burning logic, suspension and blacklist mechanisms, upgradeability, exchange rate and yield mechanisms, token architecture, cross-chain bridge risks, auditing and security history, and external dependencies. This framework does not replace market risk analysis and governance judgment, but rather provides a technical qualification baseline.
This framework aims to address "hidden risks" such as unlimited issuance, weak upgrade permissions, inconsistent bridging supply, opaque redemption paths, and reliance on off-chain custody. These issues can directly threaten the protocol's solvency, the liquidation system, and the security of collateral parameters. The framework places particular emphasis on additional scrutiny of cross-chain assets, yield-generating assets, and off-chain dependent assets such as RWA, including bridging structures, off-chain legal arrangements, custody mechanisms, and supply integrity. Assets with significant technical flaws may face reduced lending limits, restrictions on collateral parameters, delayed launches, or even recommendations to refuse access to the protocol.




