Building the Spatial Web
Why are universal standards important?
The time has come for a new web, not one made up of pages, text and media accessed from behind a screen, but one made up of people, places, things and the value we exchange made accessible in the world around us. The Spatial Web is based on a new set of protocols and standards that support, at their very core, both by design and by default, the universal values of privacy, security, trust, and interoperability.
By networking and integrating multiple next-generation technologies together, such as AI, VR/AR, IoT, Blockchain, Robotics & 5G, using space-time itself as the basis for our shared reality, an entirely new type of web can begin to emerge capable of building a future where we can live, play and work better, together.
A Web Domain name serves as a way to identify Internet resources, such as computers, networks, and services. It is really just an address.
We need a solution that metaphorically AND literally “addresses” space. We need three-dimensional or “spatial” domains.
A Distributed Ledger-enabled and tokenized stateful web can reliably connect virtual and real-world spaces, track value, validate identity, and location while preserving privacy and data sovereignty.
HSML, the elements of Spatial Contracts, enables cyber-physical “contracts as code”—programmable, automated and self-executing software that removes trade or service agreements from the realm of static documents that require constant human management and instead program them into the spatial interactions themselves so that contracts are executed by the correct action.
Similar to how we link content and web pages on the Web today using HTTP, HSTP is the solution for traversing the Spatial Web.
HSTP allows for “hyperporting” of users and Smart Assets between web spaces. “Hyperspace” links can be placed in one webspace that links to any information about anything or to another webspace.
Why are universal standards important?
We are at a key inflection point for technology and society.
Contemporary tech innovations share a single common link.
Our current Web was not designed to support newer technologies that will propel our civilization forward.
Piecemeal descriptions and industry-centric narratives do not provide the holistic vantage point from which we must consider how best to make the critically important decisions regarding matters of Trust, Interoperability, Privacy, and Security (TIPS™) in an age where powerful computing will literally surround us.
Digital content isn’t only a single blob of data but is dimensionalized and inherently spatialized, making location the fundamental representation rather than strings.
Users can own their data and digital property and choose with whom they share this data. Moreover, they retain control of it when they leave a given service provider.
Secure data collection, transmission, and storage enables interactions and transactions with virtual and physical assets between any user within and across any space—physical or virtual.
Individual control, trust, and security utilizing cryptographically-secured and decentrally-stored digital identity enables “trustlessly” complete interactions and transactions with anonymity and auditability. Previously the exchange of personal data and layers of verification were required.
Trust is based in reliable realtime validation of all users, assets, and spaces and their interactions with certifiable and verifiable records that validate various proofs of ownership, activity, traceability, and rights.
Multiuser interoperability provides searchability, viewability, interaction, transaction, and transportation of any asset or user within or across any spaces. Seamless user navigation and asset transfer is enabled within and between spaces across devices, operating systems, and locations.
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The Scientific Revolution changed our model of the Universe. The Digital Universe of Web 3.0 will shift our center of gravity from service-centric to a self-centric model for Digital Identity.
A digital representation of one’s identity has become increasingly important; this applies not only to humans, but to devices, legal entities and beyond.
Beyond the dystopia of Hyper-Reality lies the dream of a prosperous world—one with no use whatsoever for targeted ads.
We are thrilled to announce that VERSES Co-Founders, Gabriel René and Dan Mapes, have published The Spatial Web: How Web 3.0 Will Connect Humans, Machines, and AI to Transform the World
Blade Runner, The Matrix, Star Wars, Avatar, Star Trek, Ready Player One, The Avengers, and many other popular films show us futuristic worlds where holograms, robots, smart devices, virtual avatars, digital transactions, and universe-scale teleportation all work together in sync, combining the virtual and the physical with the mechanical and the biological.
It won’t be fiction much longer.
The Spatial Web and Web 3.0: What business leaders should know about the next era of computing
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To serve the global public good, development of the Spatial Web must not be dominated by the interests of specific governments or corporations.
The Foundation develops and maintains the standards and protocols with a mandate for universal interoperability, without which adoption will be slow.
A council of advisors in human and technological advancement to inform the optimum framework.
Current regulatory frameworks are far behind the market, chasing the problems that occurred half a decade ago or more.
Competing systems for basic of spatial organization block the free flow of information.
Individuals must have basic trust in the security and sovereignty of identity in order to transact in a 21st century online world.
“To assist in creating awareness, advocacy, and adoption of Web 3.0 standards, we the authors and our associates have established the Spatial Web Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to delivering the protocols and specifications needed for an open, free, and secure Spatial Web.”