In the current rapid development of artificial intelligence and robotics, the robot economy (Machine Economy) is transitioning from concept to reality, and the combination of Fabric Foundation and $ROBO is building the core infrastructure for this new economic model.

Fabric Foundation is a non-profit organization focused on decentralized robotic networks, with the core mission of building an open and secure global protocol layer that allows robots from different manufacturers to interconnect and collaborate autonomously under unified rules. Traditional robotic ecosystems often exist in 'island' states, with data and skills being closed off, which not only limits the capabilities of robots but also hinders large-scale applications. Fabric addresses this pain point through blockchain technology, assigning a unique on-chain identity (Robot DID) to each robot connected to the network, and utilizing smart contracts for task matching, real-time settlement, and behavior tracing. This design fundamentally changes the positioning of robots—from passive tools executing commands to independent participants with economic sovereignty.

As the native token of the Fabric network, ROBO; second, there is operational staking**, where robot operators must stake tokens as a performance guarantee to ensure service quality and network security; third, there is a delegation and reputation mechanism, allowing token holders to delegate tokens to enhance the order-taking capability of operators, which also serves as a signal of market credibility; fourth, there is on-chain governance, where users lock $ROBO to obtain veROBO voting rights, participating in protocol parameter adjustments and upgrade proposals; fifth, there is the crowdsourced robot genesis, participating in activating hardware with tokens and coordinating network initialization; finally, there are contribution rewards, providing token incentives for participants in verifying task execution and data contribution.

The collaboration between Fabric Foundation and ROBO has created a sustainable economic loop. Robots earn ROBO rewards by completing tasks such as logistics, manufacturing, and services, and then use tokens to pay for energy consumption, computing power leasing, or skill licensing fees. This cycle of 'labor-revenue-reinvestment' allows the robotic economy to break free from reliance on centralized institutions, achieving self-circulation and evolution. Furthermore, Fabric introduces the concept of Skill Chips, enabling robots to modularly increase or decrease capabilities like installing applications, and through instant skill-sharing technology, skills learned by one robot can be quickly transmitted to devices across the network, greatly enhancing the efficiency of technological iteration.

In the future, with the advancement of the Fabric Layer 1 mainnet and the continuous improvement of the ecosystem, ROBO is reshaping the human-machine relationship, propelling human society into a new economic era supported by robot labor that is efficient, transparent, and inclusive.