Robots don’t need money first—they need a name. Not just a marketing tag, but a real, persistent, and verifiable identity. You can’t build a functional economy on “trust me, this is the same robot as yesterday.” That’s why I keep coming back to Fabric’s identity layer. Before robots can earn, spend, or build a reputation, they need a stable existence of their own, much like our passports or credit histories that survive job changes and life shifts. Right now, most robot identities are trapped inside closed manufacturer systems and editable logs that can vanish the moment a vendor changes priorities or stops answering emails. Fabric is betting on identity-first by giving machines a cryptographic identity anchored to something no single company owns. This makes it possible to trust the entity itself rather than just the vendor behind it. The machine economy doesn't become real just because robots get smarter; it becomes real when they become verifiable participants. Identity isn’t just a feature—it’s the entire foundation.

@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO

ROBO
ROBOUSDT
0.03806
-6.78%