In early 2026, as humanoid robots and autonomous systems move from labs to real-world deployment—handling logistics, caregiving, manufacturing, and more—a fundamental question emerges: How do we ensure these machines participate fairly and autonomously in the global economy? The Fabric Foundation answers this with a decentralized, open network designed specifically for the "Robot Economy," where intelligent machines become true economic participants rather than mere tools controlled by corporations.
@Fabric Foundation , the non-profit steering this initiative, is building infrastructure that gives robots on-chain identities, wallets for autonomous transactions, verifiable coordination for tasks, and mechanisms for human-aligned governance. Starting on Base and evolving toward its own L1 chain, Fabric creates a marketplace layer: humans or businesses post jobs (via stable coins or $ROBO , robots (or fleets) bid/execute with proof-of-completion, and payments flow transparently. This eliminates centralized silos, enables global collaboration, and captures value from physical robotic labor in a trustless way. #ROBO