Uniting the World by Dividing it: Federated Maps to Enable Spatial Applications
Sagar Bharadwaj, Srinivasan Seshan, Anthony Rowe

TL;DR
This paper advocates for a federated spatial naming system to enhance scalability, privacy, and inclusivity in mapping for the Spatial Web, addressing limitations of centralized maps for indoor and outdoor applications.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a federated mapping infrastructure, enabling multiple parties to manage and serve their own maps, thus improving scalability and privacy for spatial applications.
Findings
Federated maps improve scalability and privacy.
Existing services need re-architecture for federated maps.
Federated approach supports indoor and outdoor spatial applications.
Abstract
The emergence of the Spatial Web -- the Web where content is tied to real-world locations has the potential to improve and enable many applications such as augmented reality, navigation, robotics, and more. The Spatial Web is missing a key ingredient that is impeding its growth -- a spatial naming system to resolve real-world locations to names. Today's spatial naming systems are digital maps such as Google and Apple maps. These maps and the location-based services provided on top of these maps are primarily controlled by a few large corporations and mostly cover outdoor public spaces. Emerging classes of applications, such as persistent world-scale augmented reality, require detailed maps of both outdoor and indoor spaces. Existing centralized mapping infrastructures are proving insufficient for such applications because of the scale of cartography efforts required and the privacy of…
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