I came across a very interesting feature in Fabric's white paper: 'Remote Teleoperations (Teleops).'
The official description paints it beautifully: allowing people on different continents to 'remotely assist' machines through the internet.
It sounds like a high-end multinational job that can be done at home in pajamas.
But if you tear away that layer of 'assistance' candy paper, what you see is actually an extremely cold 'cyber sweatshop.'
In that so-called 'skill chip' app store, every complex action that machines can't handle ultimately becomes a distress signal sent to the cloud.
Then, in some corner with an excess of cheap labor, a real person will take over the robot's nerves.
At this moment, it's not humans driving the machine, but the machine temporarily renting a "biological processor."
Every drop of sweat you shed in front of the screen, every subtle muscle reflex of yours, is being recorded, desensitized, by Fabric's distributed ledger, and then fed to the training models of the next generation.
This kind of "collaboration" is essentially a slow, boiling frog-style "skill liquidation."
You think you are earning $ROBO tokens to support your family, but in reality, you are teaching the machine step by step how to completely replace you.
Once that machine finally learns your two tricks, your connection will be ruthlessly severed.
At this moment, the share of the reward that originally belonged to you will become the "deflation surplus" in the system, or be given to those sitting on the board as veROBO holders.
In this vast "transaction map," human intuition and experience are quantified into the cheapest form of electricity consumption.
So, that red "remote assistance" button, is it an employment opportunity or a "one-click confirmation" leading to a career grave?
@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO