Everyone talks about how advanced robots are becoming. Faster motors, better sensors, smarter arms. But here's the thing most people skip over — who governs these robots? And how do we actually verify what they're doing?

That's exactly where Fabric Foundation is doing something most projects aren't even thinking about yet.

The Fabric Protocol isn't built around selling you the flashiest robot. It's built around a public ledger that coordinates data, computation, and regulation across a global open network. Meaning — every action, every decision, every update in the network has a verifiable trail. Not because someone promised it, but because the infrastructure is designed that way from the ground up.

Think about what that actually means. As general-purpose robots start entering more parts of our lives — warehouses, homes, hospitals — the question of who controls them becomes incredibly important. Fabric's answer is: nobody controls them alone. The protocol governs them collectively, through transparent, on-chain coordination.

The agent-native infrastructure piece is also worth paying attention to. This isn't infrastructure retrofitted for AI agents — it was designed with them in mind from the start. That's a meaningful difference when you're trying to build something that scales responsibly.

And because Fabric Foundation is a non-profit, the incentive isn't to extract value — it's to build something that actually works for the long run.

$ROBO isn't just a token. It's tied to a network that's trying to solve the right problem.

@Fabric Foundation $ROBO #ROBO