@Fabric Foundation In many automated environments, machines coordinate through centralized systems that quietly assign tasks and move data between them. Most of the time it works smoothly enough that no one notices. But small problems appear now and then. Two systems disagree about timing. A robot pauses because it is waiting for confirmation that never arrives. Nothing dramatic, just a reminder that coordination still depends on a few trusted control layers.

Fabric Protocol looks at that issue from a different angle. Instead of relying only on central orchestration, it records actions and computations on a public ledger essentially a shared log where events are written with timestamps showing when they occurred. The purpose isn’t to make robots smarter, but to make their interactions easier to verify.

When machines operate against a record that others can check, behavior changes slightly. Tasks become traceable. Decisions leave evidence. That transparency may improve coordination, though it also adds overhead that tightly optimized systems may not welcome.

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