This is not a science fiction film; this is the most realistic hidden danger of 2026.
Current robots are the private property of large companies. Once the server crashes or the large companies change the API rules, the robots all over the street will instantly turn into scrap metal.
We have entrusted the operation of cities to code, yet we have handed the switch of that code to a few publicly traded companies.
The more I think about it, the more uneasy it feels.
Today, after looking at the economic model of @Fabric Foundation , I suddenly felt like they were creating a decentralized robot union.
It is not dependent on any hardware manufacturer.
Through $ROBO, it has issued an independent ID and encrypted wallet to every robot connected.
This robot is no longer a subsidiary of Tesla; it has become a freelancer on the Fabric network.
It can earn ROBO by working (validating, computing, transporting); if it wants to connect to the network, the operator behind it must stake ROBO.
My thoughts:
This is a violent reconstruction of production relations.
In the past, humans controlled machines; in the future, it will be 'protocol scheduling machines.'
$ROBO here is not just a token; it is the tax and vote that maintain the operation of this free market of machines.
Many people are still entangled in the fluctuations of coin prices, but Fabric is already laying out the 'social security system for robots.'
The foundation's buyback mechanism and the staking threshold for developers are essentially injecting capital into this emerging economy.
One day, when you find that the robot serving you only recognizes ROBO and not fiat currency,
You will understand why the current $0.03x is practically giving away money.
This is a game about 'who is the new master of the Earth.'
Fabric chooses to distribute power to code and the community rather than to the CEO.
I am optimistic about this risky move. #robo