Most people see a robot. Engineers see a trust problem.
Who authorized that movement? Was the task actually completed? Who gets paid — and how?
Today's robots can't answer any of these questions on their own. Every action routes back to a manufacturer's server. That's not autonomy. That's remote control with extra steps.
Fabric Protocol rebuilds this from the ground up.
🔧 The architecture:
Every robot joining the network registers an on-chain DID — a decentralized identity that records ownership, permissions, and behavioral history. No manufacturer can revoke it. No single server can kill it.
Task execution is verified through Proof of Robotic Work — consensus-based confirmation that the physical action actually happened before any payment clears. Smart contracts handle settlement instantly, with no intermediary.
The OM1 operating system by OpenMind AGI sits underneath — an open-source, hardware-agnostic foundation that lets any robot manufacturer plug into the same shared network. Think Android, but for machines that move.
📐 What this unlocks:
Robots that can be hired, paid, and audited — permissionlessly. A warehouse bot in Vietnam and a delivery drone in Berlin operating on the same trust layer, settling in the same token.
That's not a roadmap feature. That's the architecture they shipped.
$20M raised. Pantera + Coinbase Ventures backing. Token sale oversubscribed in 5 hours.
The robot economy needed an internet layer.
$ROBO is building it.
What's the first real-world deployment you'd want to see on Fabric? 👇
@Fabric Foundation $ROBO #ROBO #AIxCrypto #Aİ