I’ve been seeing more conversations lately around Fabric Protocol, and it made me pause for a moment. The idea isn’t just another AI narrative. It’s more about how machines — especially robots — might eventually coordinate on open networks instead of operating inside isolated systems owned by individual companies.
Right now most robots work in closed environments. A warehouse robot belongs to one company, a delivery robot belongs to another. Everything stays siloed. Fabric seems to be exploring a different possibility where machines could have their own identities, verify the work they perform, and interact through a shared decentralized infrastructure.
What stood out to me is the focus on coordination rather than hype. Identity layers, verifiable robotic work, and automated settlement between machines are interesting concepts. But like many ambitious crypto ideas, the real question is adoption.
Infrastructure always sounds good on paper. The real test will be whether developers, robotics teams, and real-world operators actually start using it once the early attention fades.
For now, it’s one of those projects I’m simply watching to see if real activity eventually follows the idea.