People ask:
What’s the real value of ROBO Protocol?
I ask a different question.
If tomorrow every robot has a wallet —
is the world ready to give that robot a legal identity too?
That’s where the real test begins for Fabric Foundation and ROBO.
We talk a lot about the “Robot Economy.”
But an economy isn’t built on payments alone.
It’s built on:
Identity
Responsibility
Trust
Verifiability
If a robot can transact independently,
can it also be accountable independently?
Or will a human always stand behind it when something goes wrong?
The real gap isn’t in technology.
The real gap is in trust architecture.
Today, companies run robots inside closed systems.
Tomorrow, when robots interact across vendors, across borders, across legal regimes —
where is the shared framework?
At that point, ROBO isn’t just about blockchain.
It becomes about shared standards.
People are watching the price.
I’m watching the posture.
People are watching the chart.
I’m watching the question:
Will serious robotics companies trust infrastructure that lives outside their control?
If the answer becomes “yes,”
ROBO becomes infrastructure.
If the answer remains “no,”
ROBO remains a narrative.
To me, ROBO is not a present necessity.
It’s preparation for a future moment
when machines don’t just execute tasks —
they make decisions.
And in that world, the most valuable asset won’t be the token.
It will be verifiable trust.
The real question isn’t whether ROBO will move.
The real question is:
When the machine economy arrives, will we be ready?