A property owner may be enabled to prevent unauthorized uses such as preventing non-authorized users from invading their personal property, including placing advertising at the property owner property, or preventing others from putting a virtual billboard above their property that says “sex offender” or “child abuser” or “homo” or any disparaging or non-authorized message on the outside of the property (virtual or otherwise) as someone passes by. A property owner should be able to make or control the virtual experience consistent with their desire (views, values, business intent, legal boundaries etc.).
An owner may be enabled to prevent unauthorized, unapproved promotions or messages, including promotion or advertising of false, disparaging, or illegal messages. A property owner may be enabled to ensure tenants are legally compliant and consistent with the rights that have sublicensed to them. Finally, an owner may be enabled to prevent a “l(fā)and grab” that is likely to happen with random third parties trying to capture and sell virtual land associated with an individual physical property (including a home or property owner). In some cases, a property owner may be enabled to avoid paying any third party to register for property that should already legally be their virtual property.
An xR registry may enable ownership retention for rights other than physical property rights. For example, the registry may enable an individual to own and retain rights associated with a location (physical or virtual) separately from who may be the current owner of physical or virtual properly, based on such an agreed upon transaction. By way of example, it is commonplace in the physical world for an individual to retain oil and mineral rights after a property is sold. The possibility of retaining such rights in the virtual experience may also be enabled, subject to legality.