$ROBO Fabric Protocol is quietly building something unusual at the intersection of artificial intelligence, robotics, and decentralized networks. Instead of focusing on a single robot or AI model, the project is trying to create the underlying system that allows intelligent machines to cooperate, earn, and operate within a shared digital economy. Supported by the non-profit Fabric Foundation, the protocol introduces a global open network where robots and autonomous agents can register identities, perform tasks, and interact through transparent on-chain coordination.

At its core, Fabric Protocol addresses a simple but often overlooked problem: robots today cannot function as independent economic participants. They cannot own accounts, manage payments, or prove their work across different platforms. Fabric attempts to solve this by providing identity systems, payment infrastructure, and programmable coordination so machines can operate within a verifiable network.

The ecosystem is powered by the $ROBO token, which enables network fees, staking, governance participation, and rewards for verified robotic work. Robots or operators stake tokens to access the network, accept tasks, and record activity histories on a public ledger.

With backing from investors such as Pantera Capital and Coinbase Ventures and development support from robotics firm OpenMind, Fabric Protocol represents a broader vision: an open infrastructure where machines, developers, and humans collaborate in what many describe as the emerging “robot economy.”

Rather than replacing existing robotics systems, Fabric aims to connect them—forming a transparent coordination layer for the next generation of intelligent machines.

@Fabric Foundation , #ROBO $ROBO