After getting the reward, I withdrew 4,000 and planned to buy an iPhone 17
Then buy a set of clothes 🥳, with the rest as living expenses I didn't expect robo to drop so hard, thanks to @Fabric Foundation@, grateful to every friend in the community square This time I went from 580u position to 530u, after all my name is the same as "the king who sells flying" Just now while scrolling videos, I saw a delivery robot in the US go out of control and break into a residential building. Then I started thinking about who would be responsible for the losses caused? It's precisely because of this incident that I seriously read the ROBO whitepaper. That set of punishment and anti-cheating mechanisms in it are really written dead according to the rules, not playing any tricks at all.#ROBO According to the design in the ROBO whitepaper, all robots that want to access the Fabric network must first pledge a Security Reservoir, which is a security deposit - like first paying a "credit deposit" to start working. And it must be pledged using $ROBO tokens, not dollars, not USDT, just the ROBO project's own native token. It's like first paying a "credit deposit" to start working, and what's pledged is not fiat currency, but the "hard currency" of this robot network. And it's not just a one-time deposit. Every time a robot takes on a task, the system will also deduct the corresponding amount from the deposit for special pledging, which means every single transaction has a guarantee. The key point is ROBO's Slashing Conditions penalty rules. Whenever a robot has problems like data falsification, malicious cheating, substandard service, or prolonged offline, the system automatically executes punishment: deduct rewards if they should be deducted, directly burn the slashed ROBO tokens if they should be slashed, and serious cases get kicked out of the network directly. It's not controlled by people, but rather by economic rules that make robots not dare to and cannot act recklessly.$ROBO
After getting the reward, I withdrew 4,000 and planned to buy an iPhone 17
Then buy a set of clothes 🥳, with the rest as living expenses
I didn't expect robo to drop so hard, thanks to @Fabric Foundation@, grateful to every friend in the community square
This time I went from 580u position to 530u, after all my name is the same as "the king who sells flying"
Just now while scrolling videos, I saw a delivery robot in the US go out of control and break into a residential building. Then I started thinking about who would be responsible for the losses caused? It's precisely because of this incident that I seriously read the ROBO whitepaper. That set of punishment and anti-cheating mechanisms in it are really written dead according to the rules, not playing any tricks at all.#ROBO
According to the design in the ROBO whitepaper, all robots that want to access the Fabric network must first pledge a Security Reservoir, which is a security deposit - like first paying a "credit deposit" to start working. And it must be pledged using $ROBO tokens, not dollars, not USDT, just the ROBO project's own native token. It's like first paying a "credit deposit" to start working, and what's pledged is not fiat currency, but the "hard currency" of this robot network.
And it's not just a one-time deposit. Every time a robot takes on a task, the system will also deduct the corresponding amount from the deposit for special pledging, which means every single transaction has a guarantee. The key point is ROBO's Slashing Conditions penalty rules. Whenever a robot has problems like data falsification, malicious cheating, substandard service, or prolonged offline, the system automatically executes punishment: deduct rewards if they should be deducted, directly burn the slashed ROBO tokens if they should be slashed, and serious cases get kicked out of the network directly. It's not controlled by people, but rather by economic rules that make robots not dare to and cannot act recklessly.$ROBO