Robotics is advancing quickly. Every year we see smarter machines, better sensors, and more autonomous systems entering the real world.

But there is a deeper question that people rarely ask.

If robots begin performing real economic tasks logistics, inspection, delivery, data collection how should they participate in the economy?

This is the idea that @Fabric Foundation is exploring.

Instead of treating robots only as tools owned by companies, Fabric is working toward an open infrastructure where robots can function as participants in a broader network. Through on-chain identity and programmable coordination, machines could potentially interact with developers, operators, and users in a more transparent system.

At the center of this ecosystem is $ROBO .

$ROBO acts as the economic layer that connects the network. It can be used for incentives, payments, governance participation, and coordination between different actors in the ecosystem from robot operators to developers building robotic applications.

The vision is not just about building smarter machines. It’s about creating a system where robotics, AI, and decentralized infrastructure can interact in a more open environment.

If robotics becomes a major industry in the coming decade, infrastructure like this may become increasingly important.

What do you think should robots eventually be able to participate in economic systems like this?

#ROBO