@Fabric Foundation and $ROBO are the main lines of this narrative of Fabric, not how flashy a certain robot company is. Robot companies, whether it's Figure, Agility Robotics (Digit), Sanctuary AI, 1X, or Apptronik, are all following the path of 'getting to market faster', but once multiple companies collaborate on the same stage, the first thing that often explodes is the rules: who authorized it, which version is in effect, which records count as evidence, and how to proceed in case of disputes. Without a predictable system, the scene quickly turns into each company's background speaking separately, and in the end, humans still take the blame.
This is the position of the Fabric Foundation: it acts like a system maintainer, responsible for how standards are set, how they iterate, how disputes enter the process, and how rule changes can be anticipated. For the rules to operate, it still relies on $ROBO to bring resources and execution costs to the ground: contributions such as data, computing power, access, auditing, and module maintenance must be settled, governance must be executed, and at the same time, quality thresholds, anti-cheating measures, and governance must be explicitly written into the mechanism. Otherwise, the more robots there are, the more lively it gets, and the collaboration will always resemble a temporary project, never able to get on a long-term track. #robo $ROBO
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