Recently saw a project called Fabric Protocol, and it feels quite innovative. Behind it is a network promoted by the Fabric Foundation, and the core idea is quite simple: if in the future there are a large number of robots and AI working, how will they collaborate, how will they share profits, and who will set the rules?
Currently, many robots are actually isolated systems, each working on their own. The idea of Fabric is to create an open network that allows robots, AI agents, and human developers to collaborate within the same system. Data, computation, and rules are recorded through a public ledger, and verifiable computation ensures that things have truly happened, rather than just being dictated by a company's backend.
The key point here is $ROBO.
This token is not just for trading; it acts more like 'fuel' and 'voting power' in the network. Those who provide resources can earn rewards, and the community can participate in governance. Simply put: those who contribute, those who receive returns.
Imagine a slightly science fiction-like scenario:
In the future, if a robot completes a task and earns money, it will need to pay for computing power, purchase data, and even hire other AI agents to complete tasks together. All these interactions are completed on-chain, and the rules are open and transparent.
It sounds like science fiction, but many AI agents and automation systems are actually emerging now. If these things become more prevalent, there might really be a demand for an open coordination network.
I'm curious to ask everyone a question:
If robots can really earn money on their own in the future, do you think they need something like 'tokens'? Or will humans ultimately control everything?