Fabric is not being built as another robotics toolkit.
It is being built as infrastructure for machine economies.
Most robotics systems focus on capability — movement, perception, automation.
Fabric focuses on agreement.
When a robot performs a task in the real world,
who confirms it was actually completed?
Who verifies the data wasn’t manipulated?
Who decides when payment is released?
This is where Fabric changes the structure.
Developed by the Fabric Foundation,
it introduces verifiable computing and shared ledger coordination to robotics systems.
Every physical action can be cryptographically proven.
Every completed task can become a verifiable economic event.
This is bigger than automation.
As AI expands into physical environments — logistics, manufacturing, delivery, infrastructure — execution must become trustworthy at scale. Human supervision does not scale. Assumptions do not scale.
Verification does.
Fabric expands trust in execution.
It aligns incentives between machines, operators, and capital.
The real shift is not robots doing work.
The real shift is deciding who captures the value when they do.
In the emerging machine economy,
coordination is the missing layer.
Fabric is building it.
@Fabric Foundation Foundation #ROBO