In the context of AI and automation rapidly evolving, the Fabric Foundation is pursuing a rather different direction: building blockchain infrastructure for the machine economy. Through project account @Fabric Foundation , the team has repeatedly shared the goal of creating an environment where robots, AI systems, and autonomous agents can operate as real economic entities on the blockchain.
The core idea of Fabric is that each robot or agent can have a digital identity, like blockchain, and the ability to interact with smart contracts. This opens up the possibility for automated systems to conduct transactions, provide services, or share data and have their value transparently recorded on-chain. If this model is widely implemented, it could create a new layer of infrastructure for the integration of AI, robots, and Web3.
In that ecosystem, $ROBO plays the role of a central token. $ROBO is used for various purposes such as paying fees within the network, staking to support the security of the system, as well as participating in governance decisions for the protocol's development. The recent listing of $ROBO on multiple exchanges also helps expand liquidity and attract more community interest in the project.
The interesting point is that the Fabric Foundation is not just building a simple token but is trying to define how robots and AI can independently participate in the digital economy. If this vision succeeds, $ROBO could become one of the assets representing the machine economy trend in Web3.