So far, the robotics industry has focused on one thing: machine intelligence.
AI is getting smarter, sensors are becoming more precise, and automation is getting faster.
However, there is one major issue that is often overlooked: the identity and accountability of machines.
Currently, robots work well in closed environments like warehouses or factories. The reason is simple: everything is controlled by one company and one centralized database system.
But the situation changed when robots began to operate in the open world.
Imagine autonomous machines that must interact with various services, companies, and even humans. Important questions start to arise:
• Who verifies the work of these robots?
• Where is the history of their activities securely stored?
• Who is responsible if the system fails?
This is where the concept offered by @Fabric Foundation starts to attract attention.
Instead of just following the AI token trend, they are trying to build decentralized infrastructure where robots can have digital identities on the blockchain as well as publicly verifiable activity records.
In this ecosystem, the ROBO token serves as a coordination mechanism to operate the network without the need for a central authority.
However, ultimately, all infrastructure projects will face the same question: is it really used in the real world?
Some things to keep in mind going forward:
• Are developers starting to build tools on top of this protocol?
• Are physical robots really registering their identities on the blockchain?
• Are companies starting to adopt decentralized machine coordination systems?
If this concept is widely adopted, projects like this could become a new foundation for the machine economy in the future.
If not, it remains an interesting technology experiment to observe.
For now, what matters most is not the hype — but the real adoption signals from developers and industry.
#ROBO #AI #Blockchain #Write2Earn #RoboticsIndustry