DeepMind held a secret meeting today, but the discussion was not about how smart AI is.

Hello, I'm FanFan. I just saw the news that Google DeepMind held a closed-door summit today, with the theme 'AGI Safety Boundaries'. Interestingly, the attendee list included not only algorithm experts but also a group of cryptographers.

What does this indicate? Intelligence is no longer the issue; obedience is.

What does the current robotics arena look like? From MWC to the Hangzhou exhibition, everyone is showcasing their speed and computing power. However, after chatting with a few hardware friends, I realized a painful truth — the smarter the machines get, the more anxious we become. What if you let a surgical robot operate, and it suddenly makes an 'autonomous decision'?

This is where @Fabric Foundation struck a chord with me. It doesn't follow trends or roll out model parameters; instead, it equips robots with a 'behavior recorder'. The core of the Fabric protocol is to enable each machine to generate zero-knowledge proofs — proving to regulators and users that every operation it performs is within safe boundaries without exposing the underlying code. This is not about showing off skills; it's a necessity.

In terms of data, $ROBO currently has an FDV of approximately $428 million, with a market cap around 4.5 times the FDV, which is significantly higher than early AI projects. In the coming year, nearly $100 million in tokens will be unlocked, and the holding addresses are indeed quite concentrated, with liquidity not being very thick. In other words, the market is still a bit fragile, but the structure indicates that there is also potential for explosive growth.

The OpenMind team showcased an OS at CES that has already adapted to machines from Yushu and DJI, achieving a resource matching rate of over 90%. If this thing really takes off, it won't be about whose machine can do a somersault, but rather, who can issue a 'good citizen certificate' to the machines.
#ROBO #robo $ROBO