When people talk about robotics and AI, the conversation almost always revolves around intelligence. How capable is the model? How autonomous is the system? How efficient is it?

But intelligence alone doesn’t solve the real problem.

If autonomous agents are going to transact, coordinate, or execute tasks without someone constantly monitoring them, their actions need to be verifiable. Otherwise, you’re just trusting black-box automation at scale — and that’s risky.

That’s what makes Fabric Protocol interesting to me.

@Fabric Foundation isn’t trying to be another general-purpose financial chain. It’s focused on infrastructure that makes sense for agents — especially when those agents are operating independently. Verifiable computation and public ledger coordination aren’t just technical features; they’re ways to make machine execution auditable.

If machines start interacting economically, there needs to be a way to check what actually happened.

Without that, governance becomes vague and accountability weakens.

As robotics and AI systems move further into real industries, coordination layers won’t be optional. They’ll be required.

That’s why I see $ROBO less as a DeFi narrative and more as exposure to infrastructure built around verifiable execution in an emerging agent economy.

#ROBO