I watched a small robot dog navigate a cluttered room, dodge obstacles, and return to its charging dock flawlessly. It wasn’t the precision that caught me it was the implication. That robot just completed a set of tasks autonomously. But today, there’s no system for it to get credit, earn, or prove its reliability. Every “achievement” still belongs to a human, a company, or a central server.

That’s exactly the problem @Fabric Foundation and $ROBO are solving.

Fabric isn’t focused on making robots smarter they’re already learning fast. The challenge is: how do machines participate in the economy as first-class citizens? How do you verify their work? How do you reward them? How do you build trust between autonomous systems without relying on centralized control?

#robo $ROBO solves this with on-chain machine identities. Every robot gets a cryptographic identity that tracks its capabilities, tasks completed, and behavioral history. That means: