Fabric is interesting to me because it is looking at a part of the AI economy nobody else seems to be talking about.
Most teams are focused on what the machines are making. The outputs. The content. The stuff you can see. Fabric is focused on the part after the work is done — how that activity gets recorded, verified, and trusted in a way that actually holds up onchain.
That is the part that actually keeps me looking at it.
If autonomous agents are going to do real work and earn real value, there has to be more than just an output. You need proof. Proof of who did what. Proof that it was done right. Proof that the activity can be trusted enough to exchange money against it.
That is where Fabric lands for me.
It does not feel like another project trying to wear AI as a costume. It feels more like someone is finally building the back end for a world where machine labor becomes measurable, accountable, and financially native. Still early. Still risky. But the angle is sharper than most of what is getting passed off as innovation right now.