Recently, when I was watching @Fabric Foundation , I suddenly realized a problem:

In the past, when we discussed blockchain, we always focused on assets, transactions, and finance. But if a large number of AI and robots start working for people in the future, should the records on the chain only be about 'money'?

The design of the Fabric Protocol is actually more like a set of rules for machine collaboration. Through verifiable computation and a native proxy architecture, it transforms the behavior executed by machines into data that can be audited and settled. In other words, the chain no longer just records transfers, but instead records 'who completed the task and what resources they contributed'.

At this point, the role of $ROBO becomes very intuitive: it is not just a token, but more like a bookkeeping unit in the machine network. Executing tasks, participating in collaboration, and providing computing power can all form a value closed loop.

Currently, many AI projects are comparing model capabilities, but if AI does not have an economic system, it is hard to operate sustainably in the long term.

Fabric is more like solving: how the economy operates when machines become participants.

Perhaps the next phase of blockchain is not to bring more people onto the chain, but to bring more devices onto the chain.

#robo $ROBO