Over time I have been following robotics and decentralized systems. I started to notice that people pay a lot of attention to the big breakthroughs like robots that can walk put things together or deliver packages. These things are really cool. They only show a small part of what is going on.

What people do not talk about much is the money side of things the economic layer behind these machines. If robots start doing work on a big scale we have to think about who owns them how they work together and how they get paid. Robotics and decentralized systems are connected to this.

That is why I like the idea of things like Fabric Fundesion. It is not about building robots but about figuring out how to make a system that lets machines, services and the people who run them work together in a fair way. This system uses things like the ROBO token to make it all work.

Course this way of doing things has some downsides. When you make a system that is not controlled by one person it can get complicated and robotics is still a new field with a lot of technical and regulatory problems.. It shows that we need to think about this in a different way: just because a robot can do something does not mean it can work with other robots and machines.

In the end the robotic economy might not be about the robots but about the systems that let them work together smoothly like the systems that help them know who they are verify who they are and get paid. These systems help build trust over time. That is important, for robotics and decentralized systems.

@Fabric Foundation

#ROBO

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