@Fabric Foundation What interests me about Fabric is that it starts from a plain but important question: when a robot does something in the world, how do other people check what actually happened? Fabric’s answer is not just “trust the machine.” It is building around identity, verification, accountability, and public records so machine behavior can be more predictable and observable instead of disappearing into a black box. The Foundation describes this as infrastructure for machine and human identity, decentralized task allocation, payments, and accountability.
That is why the idea of reproducible autonomy matters here. A robotic run is more useful when it can be checked, reviewed, and tied back to clear rules. Fabric’s own materials lean into verified work, validator oversight, and verification economics rather than vague autonomy claims. To me, that makes the project feel less like a robotics demo and more like an attempt to build shared trust around how autonomous systems operate. @Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO
