Rights and Rules
One of the functions of the xR registry is to define and enforce rights and rules surrounding how people consume (or are subjected to) xR experiences. A right in the xR ecosystem defines who is allowed to perform a certain act within the system, such as creating or modifying a rule, object, xR experience, etc. rights also identify who can read/write to the xR registry (in concert with applicable rules).
For example, a bundle of rights may include rights to own, view, create, add, modify, share, hide, restrict, apply, compliance, require behavior, and tax. Examples of enumerated rights might include the right to create, own, rent/lease, override (such as an ability for government authorities to override certain rights), activate (see separate section of this document), deactivate (see separate section of this document), restrict, and disable (such as an ability for government authorities to disable someone for not paying taxes).
Rights (and individuals who can manage or use rights) can be white-listed or black-listed; inheritance and delegation may also be also supported. Types of rights might include compliance (manual or automated), permission or prohibition of behavior, control/ownership (including different tiers of control/ownership), and trust (for applications, individuals, businesses, devices, networks, etc.) Rights may also include the right to enforce rules. Additional rights might include rights to social media/sharing, the ability to add, interrogate, edit, override.