What if robots didn’t belong to corporations…

but to the internet?

What if machines could evolve the same way open-source software does?

One quiet problem in both AI and robotics is ownership. Most powerful machines are built, controlled, and improved inside closed systems. That means innovation moves slower and communities have little influence over how these technologies evolve.

Fabric Foundation is trying to flip that model.

Instead of centralized control, it’s building an open network where developers can create, coordinate, and govern general-purpose robots using verifiable computing and a public ledger.

In simple terms, Fabric turns robotics into a collaborative protocol — where machines, data, and computation can interact transparently on-chain.

Key innovations behind the system include:

• Verifiable computing that proves robotic actions and data are trustworthy

• Agent-native infrastructure designed for autonomous machine collaboration

• A public ledger coordinating data, compute, and governance

• Open architecture allowing developers to build and evolve robotic systems globally

• Community-driven development rather than corporate silos

The interesting part isn’t just robots.

It’s the idea that physical machines could become part of a decentralized network — just like blockchains did for finance.

If this vision works, robotics may become the next frontier of Web3.

And that’s a future worth watching.

#ROBO #robo @Fabric Foundation $ROBO

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