I want to ask a question that most people never ask.

Who loses the most if Fabric Foundation succeeds?

A few weeks ago I ran a small experiment. I tried to calculate something simple. If a delivery robot completes 50 tasks a day, where does the money actually go? To the robot's owner. To the platform. To the middleman. But the robot that actually did the work has no identity. No history. No proof that it completed anything at all.

That calculation made me understand what Fabric Foundation is actually solving.

They are building a network where every robot has its own blockchain identity. A robot delivers coffee. Recorded. A robot sorts packages in a warehouse. Recorded. A robot delivers medicine in a hospital. Recorded. Every task is paid in $ROBO automatically. No human approval needed.

When I pictured that, only one thought came to mind.

This is not just a crypto project. This is the first real economic independence for machines.

Now let me answer that question.

If Fabric succeeds, the ones who lose the most are the big tech companies that currently lock robot data, identity, and payments inside their closed private servers. They are the middlemen right now. Fabric wants to take that middleman position away from them. But openly. Without anyone having single control.

And $ROBO is the fuel that powers this entire alternative system.

Work and you earn. Do nothing and you get nothing. No middleman. No commission. Everything transparent.

When the robot economy fully arrives, there will be two paths. Either a few large companies control everything. Or open networks like Fabric break that control wide open.

I want to see the second path happen.

Which path do you want?

@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO