Robotics is no longer limited by movement, vision, or AI. The real bottleneck is coordination. When robots operate across companies and public environments, the hard question is accountability. Who verifies what a machine did, under which rules, and with what data?

Fabric Protocol focuses on that gap. Instead of building better hardware or smarter models, it creates shared infrastructure for how robots are governed and validated across institutions. Using a public ledger, it connects data, computation, and regulation into a single verifiable system. Robots can prove they followed safety rules or executed updates correctly without exposing sensitive code, shifting trust from internal reports to cryptographic proof.

The design treats machines as first-class network participants, not just tools controlled by humans. With modular architecture and foundation-led governance, it aims to support collective improvement while maintaining a shared, auditable source of truth.

If adopted at scale, it could become core infrastructure for robotic accountability. If not, it remains a strong concept waiting for real-world integration.

#robo @Fabric Foundation $ROBO