
We talk a lot about the technology behind AI and machines, but I want to explain the economic and social side of what @Fabric Foundation is doing, because to me, this is where the real revolution is happening.
Right now, if a massive corporation deploys a fleet of delivery robots or manufacturing drones, they reap 100% of the profits and make 100% of the rules. As a regular person, you have zero say in how these machines operate in your city, and you definitely aren't getting a cut of the value they generate.
The protocol completely flips this script. Because it is a global open network supported by a non-profit, it enables the collaborative evolution of robots. But it doesn't just mean developers collaborating; it means actual community governance.

Using the $ROBO token, communities can coordinate and crowdsource the deployment of entirely new robot fleets. Imagine a neighborhood pooling resources to deploy autonomous cleaning robots or delivery drones, where the community governs the rules of operation.
The machines have their own identities and can interact directly with the community that funded them. The data and regulation are all handled transparently. This ensures safe human-machine collaboration because the humans actually living alongside the machines have a direct voice in how they operate.
We are moving away from a future of corporate-owned machine monopolies into an open, decentralized machine economy. I genuinely believe this community-driven approach is the only way we scale physical AI responsibly. This shift in ownership is exactly why I'm paying so much attention to this ecosystem right now. #ROBO
