When you buy a car, it's yours. You decide where it goes, how it runs, what happens to it. Nobody reaches in remotely and changes how it behaves without your knowledge.

That's not how robots work.

Every #robo deployed today — in your warehouse, your hospital, your city — comes with a string attached. The company that built it controls the software. They decide when it gets updated, when behavior gets patched, removed, or changed. You own the hardware. They own everything that makes it actually function.

Most people haven't thought about what that means at scale.

It means one company can quietly change how a robot behaves across thousands of deployments overnight. No consent, no notification, and no external check on whether that change is safe, fair, or in anyone's interest but their own.

That's not ownership. That's a lease you never knew you'd signed.

@Fabric Foundation is building the infrastructure that changes this.

Decentralized governance for robotics — behavior changes require a transparent process, every update gets logged and traceable, no single company holds unilateral control over machines in spaces we all share.

The robots are already out there — in hospitals, warehouses, on public streets. Who controls their behavior and on whose terms is a question almost nobody is seriously asking right now.

Right now the answer is one company with zero accountability to anyone outside it. That is the problem @Fabric Foundation built to fix.

$ROBO