I’ve been taking a closer look at Fabric Protocol and the $ROBO token from an infrastructure perspective, not a price one.i share my thoughts here
it also raises deeper questions about how such robots coordinate and verify each other’s actions and improve collectively. For instance, how are these agents able to share information and verify it without compromising security? The network is able to verify information by recording it on a public ledger.$ROBO
Another question is how conflicts between different robotic agents are resolved. For instance, instead of having a central authority dictate how different rules are applied, it is possible to program such rules at the protocol level. This is important because it is able to ensure that there is distributed computing and that a single point of failure is not present.
There is also a need for developers to be able to experiment with different aspects of the protocol without compromising safety. For instance, it is important to ensure that different performance metrics are available and that accountability is maintained as it grows. The Fabric Protocol is overseen by a non-profit entity known as Fabric Foundation and is meant to ensure that robotics and innovation go hand in hand.$ROBO #robo @Fabric Foundation
