The real challenge of a robot-driven future might not be intelligence it may be organization.
As more autonomous machines enter factories, streets, farms, and warehouses, the biggest question becomes how they coordinate with each other and remain accountable. A robot can be extremely smart on its own, but without shared systems that track identity, actions, and responsibility, large robotic networks could quickly become chaotic.
This is where Fabric Protocol introduces an interesting idea. Instead of focusing only on building smarter robots, it focuses on the infrastructure around them the invisible layer that records what machines do, verifies their work, and allows them to interact within clear rules.
Think of it like the unseen systems that make modern cities work: traffic signals, identification systems, and public records. They are rarely noticed, but without them the entire system breaks down.
If robotics truly becomes part of everyday life, the most important technology might not be the robots themselves but the coordination layer that keeps everything working together.