I'm feeling the possibility that I might miss some events.
What really gets to me is falling for the hype. Then being left....
$ROBO is doing what many popular projects do: it makes you feel like you're making a mistake if you don't join in. The fear of missing out is made on purpose. The timing is carefully planned.
When CreatorPad starts trading, the volume increases, and everyone's social media gets filled with posts. It suddenly feels like you're left behind because you're not active. From my experience, the projects that actually made a real impact didn't create a rush or a sense of needing to act quickly.
Solana didn't rush people to get involved. Ethereum didn't need a competition to attract its developers.
Good projects attract people who want to build something and don't need rewards to do so.
So the simple test for #ROBO is: after March 20th, who will still be interested in it? Not for the rewards or the leaderboard. (a problem people really care about) If no one is interested, then after that date, the outcome was always obvious.
The gap between what machines can do and what we expect them to do is exactly where @Fabric Foundation is focusing. Not on ability. On accountability. Right now, when a robot fails, the blame just disappears. The manufacturer points to the operator. Operator points to the software. Software points to edge cases nobody predicted. Everyone is right in their own way. No one is truly responsible. ROBO's credit system is trying to stop that spread from happening. Stake to participate. Perform to earn. Underperform and the network remembers.
"Repeating the ledger that doesn't forget, doesn't forgive bad data, and doesn't accept excuses. That's not sci-fi infrastructure. That's the oldest accountability mechanism humans ever invented, applied to machines for the first time. Whether the market is ready to wait for it is a different question entirely."
$ROBO #ROBO @Fabric Foundation
