Imagine an “open internet” for robots—where building, upgrading, and governing general-purpose robots is transparent and verifiable. That’s what Fabric Protocol aims to be: a global open network supported by the non-profit Fabric Foundation, designed to enable safer, more trustworthy human-machine collaboration through verifiable computing and agent-native infrastructure. It coordinates data, computation, and regulation through a public ledger so it’s clear who contributed what, how it was built, and under which rules it operates.
The thrilling part is the modular robot vision—like ROBO1—where capabilities can be plugged in or removed like “skill chips.” Think of it as an app-store model for robot abilities: new skills, improved governance, stronger safety rails—continuously evolving through community collaboration. The protocol also pushes for contribution to be verifiable, so people who add value via skills, data, compute, or validation can be recognized and rewarded—forming an economy around robotic labor.
Then there’s $ROBO, the network’s engine: staking to participate, earning rewards for verified work, and shaping governance decisions like fees, policies, and operational parameters. A recent update noted that the $ROBO airdrop eligibility/registration window ran from February 20 to February 24 (03:00 UTC), with the claim phase details to be announced separately. If you believe robotics is moving toward “open source + on-chain governance,” Fabric looks like a serious step toward robots becoming not just machines—but an evolving, community-driven network.
@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO #robo
