I’m thinking… what happens when robots stop being standalone machines and start operating as part of a global network?
Most robotics projects focus on improving hardware or AI. But Fabric Protocol looks at the bigger coordination problem. It’s building an open system where robots, humans, and AI agents can interact through a transparent infrastructure.
Now think about this. If thousands of robots start doing real-world jobs, who verifies their work? Where is their activity recorded? And how do different machines coordinate with each other without a central authority?
Fabric Protocol explores a framework where robots can have digital identities, log their actions, and collaborate through a shared ledger. That means robotics could move from isolated tools to a coordinated ecosystem.
Instead of isolated machines, we are looking at a Machine Economy.
So I thought I’d share this with you all, because the future may not belong only to robots, but to the networks that connect them.
@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO

