Robots today learn inside closed fleets, where data and improvements rarely move beyond the company that owns the machines.

Fabric Protocol explores a shared coordination layer where robots and AI agents interact through verifiable computing and a public ledger, allowing tasks, data contributions, and governance decisions to be recorded in a system that multiple organizations can audit and build on.

The architecture separates machine identity, computation, and rule-setting so robots can participate directly in network activity while humans still define safety and collaboration standards.

Recent developments show the framework taking shape: the ROBO token began public trading on February 27, 2026, introducing an economic layer for task settlement and governance, and the system operates with a fixed supply of 10 billion tokens designed to meter machine participation and incentives.

If those mechanisms work as intended, Fabric’s real significance is practical: a structure where robotic work can be verified, coordinated, and exchanged across organizations rather than remaining trapped inside isolated deployments.

@Fabric Foundation #robo $ROBO

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