In some cases, the object is a subset of a fixed location, such as an advertising billboard on a road or on a place of business. It is possible that one, multiple, or all parties could impact the xR experience, especially if multiple billboards are in place of business.
The xR experience may help ensure that signage is compliant with government regulations, as well as manage property rights among the various parties. For example, the xR registry may help ensure that a property owner can control digital billboards on their property, that a business can prevent their competition from making competing offers while customers walk through their locations, and the governments can prohibit inappropriate content within schools or government owned places.
The xR registry may also enable the ability to register and manage xR “applications” that are (or are not) permitted to play within certain criteria. In some cases, the xR experiences may be construction or safety related. For example, a fire inspector scenario may have the ability to locate building futures and hazardous materials. A building inspector may have the ability to perform remote inspection of construction at various stages.
In the case where a consumer is utilizing some rendering device and looking at an inanimate object at a specific location, xR information may be overlaid in conjunction with or on top of inanimate object. For example, the object could be a menu at a restaurant, a Tylenol bottle at store available for purchase, or a coupon at a retail store. In the case of a retail coupon, the xR experience may be created by and account for manufacturer, the brands of object, the store selling the object, the franchise of store, and the supply chain distributor.