I’ve been around the crypto space long enough to recognize a familiar rhythm. Every cycle introduces a new story the market wants to believe in. For a while it was DeFi then NFTs now AI and autonomous systems. The problem is that most projects rush to attach themselves to whatever narrative is trending while the harder questions about infrastructure rarely get the same attention.
When I started reading more about @FabricFND, what stood out wasn’t hype but the type of problem it seems to be thinking about. If we imagine a future where AI agents automated services and even robotics begin interacting economically on networks the real challenge won’t just be speed or scalability. It will be identity verification and coordination between machines that don’t inherently trust each other.
That’s where the concept around $ROBO becomes interesting to observe. The idea isn’t simply another token economy but a framework where machines could potentially identify themselves verify actions and exchange value in a structured way. In theory something like this could become part of the invisible infrastructure behind machine driven systems.
Of course crypto history reminds us to stay cautious. Many ambitious ideas struggle when they meet real world complexity. Still watching how @Fabric Foundation approaches machine coordination and the role of $ROBO makes me wonder whether we are slowly moving toward a layer of infrastructure designed not just for humans, but for machines as well.