One thing about Fabric Protocol that people might be overlooking is this:
It doesn’t seem obsessed with collecting more robot data.
It seems more focused on proving what actually happened.
Machines already generate endless information — logs, sensor readings, images, task records. But raw data by itself doesn’t mean much. The real question is whether a system can prove that a real machine completed a real task and that the result can be trusted.
That’s where Fabric’s design starts to make more sense.
A blockchain doesn’t need to store every detail produced by a machine.
What matters more is confirming the important things:
• identity
• verification
• proof that work actually happened
Everything else can stay off-chain as noise.
That approach feels more grounded than a lot of crypto narratives built purely around attention.
It’s not about stori2ng more data.

It’s about creating better proof.
And in a future machine economy, the edge may not come from having the most data — but from being able to prove the right things clearly and reliably.
That’s why I keep watching what Fabric is building.