#robo $ROBO Most people assume robot economies will scale naturally.
I’m not convinced they will.
Machines are already good at executing tasks. That part isn’t the real challenge. The difficult part is proving that the work actually happened.
Imagine thousands of robots operating across different networks — delivering goods, inspecting infrastructure, collecting data. Before any reward is issued, someone has to verify that the task was completed by a legitimate device and that the data hasn’t been altered.
Without reliable verification, machine labor quickly turns into noise.
This is why coordination and verification layers may end up being more important than the robots themselves. Execution creates activity, but verification creates trust.
That’s the part of the experiment I’m watching closely with $ROBO .
#Robo @Fabric Foundation $ROBO $RIVER
I’m not convinced they will.
Machines are already good at executing tasks. That part isn’t the real challenge. The difficult part is proving that the work actually happened.
Imagine thousands of robots operating across different networks — delivering goods, inspecting infrastructure, collecting data. Before any reward is issued, someone has to verify that the task was completed by a legitimate device and that the data hasn’t been altered.
Without reliable verification, machine labor quickly turns into noise.
This is why coordination and verification layers may end up being more important than the robots themselves. Execution creates activity, but verification creates trust.
That’s the part of the experiment I’m watching closely with $ROBO .
#Robo @Fabric Foundation $ROBO $RIVER