#robo $ROBO @Fabric Foundation Last month, I just joined Binance Square and wrote a short essay for a month, earning 3000 U+, many veterans might look down on this, but for newcomers entering the market under such conditions, getting this result with zero risk is quite satisfying. The rewards for one round amounted to 4.3 million tokens, which is roughly around 200,000 dollars now. The top 100 averaged about 2000 dollars each (the front row had more). Why not give it a try when you can easily handle two articles a day? Let me introduce you to the project @Fabric Foundation and what it actually does, so that after understanding, the writing will have more direction: To put it simply in human terms: Fabric is building a "robot economy network." Many AI robots can work now, such as inspection, transportation, maintenance, and logistics. But there's a problem in the real world: these robots basically belong to company assets. The company buys the equipment, the company takes orders, and the company collects money. Robots are just tools; they have no identity and no economic record of their own. In Fabric, each robot will have an on-chain identity. The tasks it has performed, how long it has run, maintenance records, and service income will all be recorded. Robots are no longer just a device number; they are a node in the network. When someone needs robot services, they can publish tasks through the Fabric network. The robot completes the work, the system records the behavior, and then settles through $ROBO . The task party pays, the operating node maintains the equipment, and the profits are distributed according to network rules. To ensure stable network operation, Fabric has also designed a staking mechanism. Nodes participating in robot operations need to pledge assets as collateral. If malicious behavior or violations occur, the deposit will be deducted. This makes the entire system more reliable. Simply put, Fabric does three things: First, it gives robots an on-chain identity. Second, it establishes a task market for robot services. Third, it settles with $ROBO, allowing the robot economy to operate. As more physical robots connect to Fabric, the tasks performed by robots will form real economic activities, and the network will grow larger. AI is responsible for decision-making, robots are responsible for execution, and Fabric is responsible for recording and settlement.