Over the past year, seeing the Iranian Rial halve by 99% within a month under the influence of international tensions, many people suddenly realized that fiat currency is not an absolutely safe store of wealth. This reminds me of a seemingly science fiction yet increasingly realistic topic: if in the future, it is not humans who make money, but robots, where should wealth be stored? Recently, when I researched the ROBO token launched by Fabric Protocol, I had a strong feeling — it is not just the next hype, but an attempt to replace the traditional financial system's constraints on robots with blockchain.

@Fabric Foundation The core of this project is to provide decentralized identity and settlement capabilities for robots. Its token ROBO has already been launched on Binance and Bitget, enhancing liquidity and accessibility. More importantly, it combines AI with blockchain to achieve on-chain verification through a dual-chain architecture, supporting robots in conducting autonomous economic activities. You may ask: Why do robots need blockchain?

When I visited the warehouse to observe the automation equipment, I found that robots in the existing systems are like nameless tools. They cannot open bank accounts, sign contracts, or even purchase electricity or maintain software by themselves. All payments must go through a company or platform, which means that the 'workers' who truly create value have no economic identity. The design philosophy of Fabric is precisely to address this pain point: each machine has an on-chain identity and wallet, and all tasks and rewards are automatically settled through smart contracts, avoiding commissions from centralized platforms and forming an unmediated market for machine labor.

Of course, it is not easy to convince ordinary people of this story. There are already too many combinations of AI and blockchain in the cryptocurrency space, and it is difficult to impress investors with concepts alone. What impressed me is that after the launch of ROBO, they were not in a hurry to pump the price but focused on building the infrastructure. The article states that the project introduced a workload relay system and a reputation incentive model, rewarding reliable hardware providers and filtering out inefficient participants by recording the tasks completed by each robot on-chain. This mechanism addresses a major challenge in the robot economy—how to ensure service quality while avoiding cheating.@Fabric Foundation #robo $ROBO