I was reading about how robots join networks today, and something about
@Fabric Foundation made me pause. Most automation systems treat machines like tools controlled by one company. Fabric seems to approach it differently. It treats robots more like independent participants inside a shared network.
What caught my attention is the idea of on chain identity for machines. Instead of robots operating anonymously inside private fleets, Fabric registers them with verifiable identities and wallets so they can receive tasks and payments directly through the protocol.
That changes how coordination works. A robot can accept a job, execute it, submit proof of work, and settle payment through the network rather than through a centralized operator. The protocol records those actions on chain so other participants can verify what actually happened.
In that structure,
$ROBO becomes the operational layer. It pays for identity registration, network transactions, and task settlement while also being staked to access coordination functions.
If machine to machine activity keeps growing, systems like Fabric might end up acting as the infrastructure that lets autonomous agents coordinate work without relying on a single controller.
@Fabric Foundation #ROBOTAXI $ROBO #ROBO