#robo $ROBO

I kept thinking: the problem isn’t robots doing the wrong thing — it’s us not being able to prove what they did when it matters.

Fabric feels like it’s trying to make robot collaboration accountable in a boring, practical way: by turning actions into checkable receipts.

Instead of “trust this agent,” the idea is “verify this workflow happened,” so data + compute + permissions aren’t hand-waved after the fact.

And governance, in this framing, isn’t a committee decision — it’s a set of enforceable workflows that agents can follow and everyone else can audit.

The analogy that clicked for me is a shared lab notebook with carbon copies: every step gets recorded in a way you can’t quietly rewrite later.

A real sign they’re moving from theory into ops was the ROBO eligibility + wallet registration window running Feb 20 → Feb 24 (03:00 UTC).

And the token design is already tangible: ~2.23B circulating out of a 10B max supply, which shapes how strong (or weak) those “receipts” can be as economic incentives.

If Fabric succeeds, coordination won’t depend on trust in personalities it’ll depend on verifiable, enforceable trails of work.

@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO

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