This is one of the biggest questions of the technological era. As AI becomes increasingly intelligent and robots take on more and more tasks, a common concern in society emerges: if machines can do almost everything, where will humans stand in the future economy? And who will own the value created by these automated systems?
One emerging idea is that humans should not compete with robots, but design the economic systems that robots operate within. The solution is not to limit technological development, but to redesign the way humans participate in the robot economy.
From Fabric’s vision, I realize that robots could become the primary workforce across many industries. They can work continuously, handle dangerous or repetitive tasks, and operate at a scale that humans alone could hardly achieve. But that does not mean humans will be removed from the system. On the contrary, Fabric places humans in a new and more important role: the architects of the robot economy.
You might ask, “So what exactly will humans contribute and do in this system?” Let’s explore the inner perspective of Fabric to find the answer. Humans design the skills for robots, train them, provide the data that allows them to learn, monitor their behavior, and build the systems that help robots operate efficiently. Robots may perform the tasks, but the intelligence and structure behind the system still come from humans. More importantly, Fabric aims to ensure that the economic value created by robots is shared with those who contribute to developing the ecosystem.
Individuals or development teams can build skill models for robots. When robots use those skills to perform tasks in the real world, the creators of those skills receive a portion of the revenue. This transforms human knowledge into a direct economic asset within the robot economy.
In addition, the system applies a Proof-of-Contribution mechanism, where the ROBO token is distributed based on the real value each participant contributes to the network. Contributions can come in the form of data, computing resources, system supervision, or the development of new models. Instead of being merely a speculative asset, the token becomes a tool for recognizing and distributing value to those who genuinely help build the platform.
Through this approach, Fabric is not simply talking about robots or AI. They are attempting to build an entirely new economy centered around human knowledge and machine capability. In this economy, robots may generate abundance on a massive scale. But the power to design, govern, and own the value still remains in human hands.
Therefore, Fabric’s answer to one of the greatest questions of our time is quite clear:
The future is not a world where humans compete with robots, but a world where humans design the systems that allow robots to work for the benefit of the entire society
@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO #Fualnguyen