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		<title>Metaverse Standards Forum Introduces Sneeze, the World&#8217;s First Open Metaverse Browser Engine</title>
		<link>https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-introduces-sneeze-the-worlds-first-open-metaverse-browser-engine/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeffrey Phillips]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 13:45:16 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Press Releases]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://metaverse-standards.org/?p=17090</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Beaverton, OR — June 15, 2026 — The Open Metaverse Browser Initiative (OMBI), created by the Metaverse Standards Forum™ in collaboration with RP1, today introduced Sneeze, the first open metaverse [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-introduces-sneeze-the-worlds-first-open-metaverse-browser-engine/">Metaverse Standards Forum Introduces Sneeze, the World&#8217;s First Open Metaverse Browser Engine</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Beaverton, OR</strong> — <strong>June 15, 2026</strong> — The <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/open-metaverse-browser-initative/">Open Metaverse Browser Initiative (OMBI)</a>, created by the Metaverse Standards Forum™ in collaboration with RP1, today introduced Sneeze, the first open metaverse browser engine (MBE). Available immediately as open source under the Apache 2.0 license on the Forum&#8217;s GitHub repository, Sneeze gives developers, enterprises, hardware manufacturers, and researchers the foundational technology to build the open metaverse.</p>
<p>At the core of every web browser today sits an engine: Blink powers Chrome, Edge, and Brave; WebKit powers Safari; Gecko powers Firefox. Those engines were built for 2D documents. Sneeze is a new engine, purpose-built for spatial computing. Organizations can embed it into existing browsers or use it to power standalone native metaverse browsers. Sneeze delivers capabilities the current web stack was never designed for: proximity-based service discovery, secure multi-origin 3D scene composition through the Scene Object Model (SOM), per-service WASM sandboxing for security isolation, and real-time co-presence for AI agents, AR glasses, and enterprise environments at scale.</p>
<p>Market forces are converging, driving the need to make the web a truly capable spatial platform. Major technology companies are racing to ship AR glasses. Enterprises are deploying digital twins in airports, hospitals, and factories to transform operations with real-time spatial data. AI agents and autonomous systems are being designed for deployment in physical spaces, where they must perceive, interact with, and contribute to a shared spatial environment in real time. All of these applications need a common, open mechanism to connect to spatial experiences and services across devices, operators, and platforms, while retaining the same ownership and control as their web infrastructure.<br />
No standards-based spatial platform exists today. Without one, every proprietary platform risks becoming a stack that can be discontinued at any time, stranding the organizations that built on it. Sneeze solves this by giving the metaverse the same open foundation as the web: a community-developed engine, based entirely around open standards, that any organization can build on reliably, with no single company able to discontinue or control it.</p>
<p><em>&#8220;Enabling users to seamlessly connect with spatial services, AI, and other users as they journey through the real world is a compelling definition of the metaverse. The web is the only platform that has the reach and openness to make this vision real,&#8221; </em>said <strong>Neil Trevett, president of the Khronos Group and of the Metaverse Standards Forum</strong>.<em> &#8220;Building the spatial web will need a constellation of standards from dozens of standards organizations. Enabling and fostering cooperative standardization is the reason the Forum exists, and building Sneeze under the OMBI is a perfect vehicle to catalyze, prototype, and deliver metaverse interoperability.&#8221;</em></p>
<h3>How It Works</h3>
<p>Sneeze enables self-hosted spatial content that works the way the web does today. Organizations host their own spatial fabrics, the metaverse equivalent of websites, on their own infrastructure. Sneeze handles multi-origin scene composition, rendering, networking, and security natively across mobile, desktop, VR, and AR devices without proprietary dependencies.</p>
<p>The engine can discover and load spatial content based on physical proximity. As someone moves through an airport, hospital, or factory, relevant content appears automatically without having to download multiple applications for each location.</p>
<p>Sneeze also makes shared immersive spaces seamless. Services from multiple organizations contribute to a single continuous scene through the Scene Object Model (SOM) while maintaining strict security boundaries through per-service WASM sandboxing. Each operator writes to its own branch of the scene graph, ensuring that no service can unexpectedly access another&#8217;s data or inject content into another&#8217;s space. Participants across AR glasses, VR headsets, phones, and desktops share the same spatial experience simultaneously with built-in presence, all without downloads or installations. To dive deeper into the OMBI architecture, go to <a href="https://omb.wiki/">omb.wiki</a>.</p>
<h3>The First Browser using Sneeze Is Coming</h3>
<p>RP1 is the lead architect and maintainer of Sneeze, having developed the engine through OMBI in coordination with the Metaverse Standards Forum. RP1 is now building the world&#8217;s first native metaverse browser powered by Sneeze and will share more details at AWE 2026 and in the weeks following.</p>
<p><em>&#8220;We built the first metaverse browser as a working prototype on the current web stack and hit its limits firsthand,&#8221; </em>said <strong>Sean Mann, Co-Founder and CEO of RP1 and board member of the Metaverse Standards Forum</strong>. <em>&#8220;Web browsers were not designed for proximity-based content, for dozens of independent operators compositing in one scene, or for the spatial infrastructure that AR glasses and AI will demand. Developing Sneeze through OMBI and the Forum means it belongs to the entire industry from day one. Sneeze is to spatial computing what Blink is to the modern web, and the first browser built on it will prove the standard holds up in a real product.&#8221;</em></p>
<h3>Built on Proven Open Standards</h3>
<p>Sneeze builds on established open standards from multiple standards organizations, including existing internet standards (HTTPS, TCP/IP, DNS, etc.), the Khronos Group (ANARI, OpenXR, SPIR-V, glTF), the W3C (WebAssembly, Decentralized Identifiers), and many more. What is new is the spatial composition layer: the SOM, the evolving infrastructure for hosting and accessing real-time geolocated services, and the Sneeze engine itself, which makes multi-origin spatial scenes secure and performant.</p>
<p>Architecture and API documentation is available at <a href="https://omb.wiki/sneeze">omb.wiki/sneeze</a>. Source code is live on the Metaverse Standards Forum GitHub. Universities, enterprises, hardware manufacturers, and individual developers are already contributing.</p>
<p><em>“The Open AR Cloud Association warmly welcomes this ambitious and exciting initiative, and its pursuit of a long-held dream: an open spatial web browser built on open standards and protocols. For this industry to finally realize its potential and benefit everyone, it must follow the playbook of the open web platform and resist the walled-garden XR ecosystems that proprietary platform builders have tried, in vain, to establish. AR exists within physical reality, which, at its very core, is a shared experience; dividing the same physical space between separate platforms that don&#8217;t work seamlessly together is meaningless. At a time when trust in big-tech platforms sits at a historic low, we believe businesses of every size, developers, creators, entrepreneurs, customers, and citizens alike are ready for the future of open spatial computing,” </em><strong>Jan-Erik Vinje and Ali Hantal, co-presidents, Open AR Cloud.</strong></p>
<h3>Academia joins the effort: the Open Metaverse Academia Alliance</h3>
<p>Alongside Sneeze, the University of Rochester launched the Open Metaverse Academic Alliance (OMAA), bringing universities and research institutions into the open standards work underway through OMBI. Member institutions conduct foundational research on the metaverse browser engine, contribute to the open-source Sneeze project, and prepare students and researchers for careers in spatial computing. The alliance also partners with enterprise organizations to facilitate research across industries, and encourages participation from academic institutions worldwide.</p>
<p><em>&#8220;The open web was built in universities, and the metaverse should be too. The Open Metaverse Academic Alliance was created to bring universities and enterprise partners together to advance the open standards behind Sneeze and the Open Metaverse Browser Initiative, and to train the engineers who will build on them,&#8221; </em>said <strong>Barry Silverstein, Director of the Center for eXtended Reality at the University of Rochester.</strong><em> &#8220;We invite academic and industry partners worldwide to join us in ensuring spatial computing is shaped by open research and the next generation of talent, with interoperability as a core foundation.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>To learn more or get involved in OMAA, visit <a href="https://www.rochester.edu/university-research/initiatives/extended-reality-research-and-application-extrra/open-metaverse-academic-alliance-omaa/">https://www.rochester.edu/university-research/initiatives/extended-reality-research-and-application-extrra/open-metaverse-academic-alliance-omaa/</a></p>
<h3>Get Involved</h3>
<p>Enterprises can deploy spatial services without giving up the data ownership, revenue control, and platform freedom they have on the web today. Hardware and XR device manufacturers can ensure their devices reach every spatial service. Platform vendors can help shape the standards their products will run on. Standards organizations can channel real-world implementation requirements and feedback into their work. Developers and researchers can build a living testbed where specifications become working systems.</p>
<p>The engine is live, and the source code is open. Join the effort at <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">metaverse-standards.org</a>.</p>
<ul>
<li>Source code: <a href="https://github.com/MetaverseStandards/Sneeze">https://github.com/MetaverseStandards/Sneeze</a></li>
<li>The case for a metaverse browser: <a href="https://omb.wiki/standards">https://omb.wiki/standards</a></li>
<li>Architecture documentation: <a href="https://omb.wiki/sneeze">https://omb.wiki/sneeze</a></li>
<li>OMBI initiative: <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/open-metaverse-browser-initative">metaverse-standards.org/open-metaverse-browser-initative</a></li>
</ul>
<h3>Meet the Team at AWE 2026</h3>
<p>The OMBI team will be at AWE 2026 (June 15–18, Long Beach, CA), presenting two sessions:</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://www.awexr.com/usa-2026/agenda/1972-open-standards-for-ar-glasses-virtual-worlds">From Web Browser to Metaverse Browser</a> — fireside chat on Sneeze with Sean Mann (Co-Founder and CEO, RP1) and Neil Trevett (President, Metaverse Standards Forum and Khronos Group) on June 16 at 4:30 p.m., Room 101A.</li>
<li><a href="https://www.awexr.com/usa-2026/agenda/2164">OMBI Architecture &amp; Roadmap</a> — open roundtable discussion on June 17 at 1:40 p.m, Room 103B, for anyone interested in getting involved.</li>
</ul>
<p>Visit Khronos and the Metaverse Standards Forum at <a href="https://www.awexr.com/usa-2026/expo_floor_plan?khronos-group">Booth #1041</a>, and visit RP1 at <a href="https://www.awexr.com/usa-2026/expo_floor_plan?rp1">Booth #928</a>.</p>
<h3>About the Metaverse Standards Forum</h3>
<p>The Metaverse Standards Forum is a non-profit consortium dedicated to fostering metaverse interoperability. Open to all organizations of any size, including standards organizations, companies, and universities, the Forum is committed to promoting open standards, collaboration, and best practices to pave the way for an open, inclusive, and accessible metaverse. Metaverse Standards Forum members engage in building consensus on interoperability requirements, prototyping, plugfests, and open-source tool development. Learn more at <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">metaverse-standards.org</a>, and follow the Metaverse Standards Forum on <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/86618224/admin/page-posts/published/">LinkedIn</a>.</p>
<h3>About the Open Metaverse Browser Initiative</h3>
<p>The Open Metaverse Browser Initiative (OMBI), created by the Metaverse Standards Forum in collaboration with RP1, brings standards organizations, technology companies, developers, and researchers together to build the spatial equivalent of the web browser: open, interoperable, and owned by no single company. RP1 is the lead architect and maintainer. Sneeze, the first open metaverse browser engine, is developed through OMBI and available on the Forum&#8217;s GitHub repository under the Apache 2.0 license. Learn more at <a href="https://omb.wiki">omb.wiki</a>.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Press Kit: <a href="https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1mZ9R83IToEjv2zle0kML7Fl0axqjApcP">https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1mZ9R83IToEjv2zle0kML7Fl0axqjApcP</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-introduces-sneeze-the-worlds-first-open-metaverse-browser-engine/">Metaverse Standards Forum Introduces Sneeze, the World&#8217;s First Open Metaverse Browser Engine</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
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		<title>Accessibility in the Metaverse Working Group Q2 Report</title>
		<link>https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/accessibility-in-the-metaverse-working-group-q2-report/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeffrey Phillips]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jul 2025 22:24:09 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Press Releases]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://metaverse-standards.org/?p=15472</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>In Q2 2025, the Accessibility in the Metaverse Working Group held 6 general meetings, expanding to 60 members, and began updating its long-term vision.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/accessibility-in-the-metaverse-working-group-q2-report/">Accessibility in the Metaverse Working Group Q2 Report</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Accessibility in the Metaverse &#8211; 2025 Q2</h2>
<h4>Quarterly Report | Apr &#8211; Jun 2025 | Metaverse Standards Forum</h4>
<p>Accessibility in the Metaverse Working Group Chairs:<br />
Michael Cooper (Aihal Accessibility), Dylan Fox (XR Access), James Maki (Inclusive Reality)</p>
<h3>Executive Summary</h3>
<p>In Q2 2025, the Accessibility in the Metaverse Working Group held 6 general meetings, expanding to 60 members, and began updating its long-term vision. A significant achievement was the publication of the white paper, &#8220;Good Intentions, Real Barriers: Investigating Accessibility in XR Workflows,&#8221; along with an interactive Figma prototype, summarizing user research on accessibility barriers in XR. The group continued refining the &#8220;virtual museum tour&#8221; use case, breaking down key tasks and examining them through the lens of W3C disabled personas to inform ability-agnostic criteria. Additionally, members participated in the 2025 XR Access Symposium, discussing the need for codified accessibility and ethical policies in the metaverse. The group aims to create a working draft of XR accessibility criteria and examples in the next quarter.</p>
<h3>Operations</h3>
<p>Over the course of Q2, we held 6 general meetings and added another 9 new members to our roster, bringing us to a total of 60. We also began a review of our Long Term Vision to bring it up to date with our current trajectory.</p>
<h3>Research</h3>
<p>User Research: White Paper Published</p>
<p>Last quarter we began a user research project intended to understand the accessibility barriers facing XR practitioners. Mrunmai Abhyankar, a graduate student of the University of Austin, worked under co-chair Dylan Fox to conduct user interviews with approximately 20 XR creators and accessibility specialists to understand their approach to accessibility in extended reality.</p>
<p>This quarter, we are proud to announce the publication of the results as both a white paper and interactive Figma prototype. These can be found here: Good Intentions, Real Barriers: Investigating Accessibility in XR Workflows.</p>
<div id="attachment_15473" style="width: 1077px" class="wp-caption alignnone"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-15473" class="size-full wp-image-15473" src="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/Q2-Report-Blog-Good-Intentions.jpg" alt="Good Intentions, Real Barriers: Investigating Accessibility in XR Workflows" width="1067" height="787" srcset="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/Q2-Report-Blog-Good-Intentions.jpg 1067w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/Q2-Report-Blog-Good-Intentions-980x723.jpg 980w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/Q2-Report-Blog-Good-Intentions-480x354.jpg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) and (max-width: 980px) 980px, (min-width: 981px) 1067px, 100vw" /><p id="caption-attachment-15473" class="wp-caption-text">Our first published white paper, exploring how accessibility figures into XR developer and accessibility tester workflows.</p></div>
<p>Use Cases: Refining the Virtual Museum</p>
<p>We continued our use case work from last quarter, focusing especially on the use case of students in a virtual museum tour. We broke it down into four key tasks:</p>
<ol>
<li>Choosing an avatar to represent them in the museum</li>
<li>Moving around the museum space, observing and interacting with the exhibits</li>
<li>Attending a one-to-many presentation from the curator, including a 2D slide show</li>
<li>Collaborating in small groups with other students on a project related to their experience</li>
</ol>
<p>We then examined how four of the W3C disabled personas would complete each of these tasks. This provided insight into how to frame our criteria around ability-agnostic actions, and showcased some of the ways that disabled users could interact with XR.</p>
<h3>Outreach</h3>
<h4>MSF at the 2025 XR Access Symposium</h4>
<p>Several members of the MSF Accessibility Working Group attended the 2025 XR Access Symposium, XR Access’ annual conference focused on extended reality accessibility. In particular, the XR/AI Policy &amp; Standards breakout discussion touched on the need to codify and enforce accessibility and other ethical policies for the Metaverse.</p>
<div id="attachment_15474" style="width: 1082px" class="wp-caption alignnone"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-15474" class="size-full wp-image-15474" src="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/XR-AI-Policy-Standards.jpg" alt="The XR/AI Policy &amp; Standards breakout discussion" width="1072" height="713" srcset="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/XR-AI-Policy-Standards.jpg 1072w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/XR-AI-Policy-Standards-980x652.jpg 980w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/XR-AI-Policy-Standards-480x319.jpg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) and (max-width: 980px) 980px, (min-width: 981px) 1072px, 100vw" /><p id="caption-attachment-15474" class="wp-caption-text">The XR/AI Policy &amp; Standards breakout discussion of the 2025 XR Access Symposium included several members of the MSF Accessibility working group.</p></div>
<h3>Goals for Next Quarter</h3>
<p>In the next quarter, we plan on moving from use cases to focusing on our next core deliverable informed by our user research: a list of XR accessibility criteria and examples. We also intend to refine and update our long-term vision.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/accessibility-in-the-metaverse-working-group-q2-report/">Accessibility in the Metaverse Working Group Q2 Report</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
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		<title>Metaverse Standards Forum 2024 Annual Report</title>
		<link>https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-2024-annual-report/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeffrey Phillips]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jan 2025 18:13:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Press Releases]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://metaverse-standards.org/?p=14460</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-2024-annual-report/">Metaverse Standards Forum 2024 Annual Report</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
]]></description>
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				<div class="et_pb_text_inner"><p>The Metaverse Standards Forum marked a significant milestone in April 2024 by celebrating its first anniversary as an independent, non-profit, industry consortium. As we reflect on our journey, we want to share the Forum&#8217;s accomplishments and milestones throughout 2024. This report showcases the Forum&#8217;s key accomplishments and milestones throughout 2024.</p>
<h2>Forum Motivation and Formation</h2>
<p>The end of 2021 marked a pivotal moment when the technology industry recognized an extraordinary convergence of several disruptive technologies—artificial intelligence, GPU processing, XR, Web3, and advanced networking including 5G/6G. While each of these innovations is transformative in its own right, their integration represents a generational shift in how humans interact with technology, merging the connectivity of the Web with the immersiveness of Spatial Computing. This technological synthesis has come to be known as &#8220;the metaverse.&#8221;</p>
<p>While the future integration of these rapidly evolving technologies will unfold through a complex, evolutionary process that defies precise prediction, one fundamental imperative is immediately clear: interoperability through global open standards. This foundation of interoperability will enable companies and platforms to effectively harness emerging technologies as they become pervasive, creating market opportunities that far exceed what any system could achieve alone in its isolated silo.</p>
<p>The metaverse&#8217;s broad scope requires open standards developed by a diverse ecosystem of organizations—Standards Development Organizations (SDOs), consortia, non-profits, companies, and academic institutions. Yet traditionally, SDOs have operated within their specific domains of expertise, which can limit broader industry collaboration. Creating the metaverse demands cross-disciplinary communication and cooperation. The Metaverse Standards Forum emerged to address this need—not as a standards body, but as a neutral, accessible venue where standards organizations and industry can come together to collaborate.</p>
<p>In 2022, as interest in the metaverse grew, The Khronos Group—an SDO active in metaverse-related open standards for 3D acceleration, AI, and XR—recognized the need for a widely accessible venue where organizations could coordinate their interoperability efforts. However, no such organization existed at the time. In response, Khronos President Neil Trevett, together with Patrick Cozzi of Cesium and Marc Petit of Epic Games, initiated the Metaverse Standards Forum as a one-year funded project running from April 2022 to April 2023. The Forum launched in June 2022 with 37 founding members, comprising companies, SDOs, and industry associations, united in their mission to coordinate efforts toward building a global, open, and inclusive metaverse.</p>
<p>During its initial &#8220;incubation&#8221; period as a Khronos Group project, the Forum established its foundational infrastructure, including its website and support systems. The organization adopted many of the Khronos Group&#8217;s proven best practices, with Khronos leadership—including Neil Trevett and Emily Stearns—serving as Forum leaders, roles they continue to hold today. The Forum&#8217;s explosive growth to over 2,600 member organizations demonstrated the industry&#8217;s clear need for such a collaborative platform.</p>
<p>Plurality, inclusivity, openness, transparency, and decision-making by consensus have been key values of the Forum since its inception. In April 2023, having validated its core concepts, the Forum took a significant step forward: its membership voted to incorporate as an independent non-profit, establishing its own governance, finances, and operations under an elected leadership board. Since its incorporation as a Delaware non-profit, the Forum has maintained its founding principles of openness and pragmatic action to accelerate metaverse interoperability. With its extraordinary membership of over 2,600 organizations, the Forum holds a unique position to enhance visibility and foster cooperation on metaverse standards—creating meaningful industry-wide impact through global collaborative participation.</p>
<h2>The Industry Role of the Metaverse Standards Forum</h2>
<p>Since its founding, the Forum has emphasized pragmatic, industry-driven collaboration, eschewing rigid metaverse definitions and long-term roadmaps. Instead, it acknowledges that the metaverse will evolve through successive waves of innovation, propelled by emerging technologies and products. Through its bottom-up pre- and post-standardization activities, the Forum helps address urgent industry needs while fostering immediate business opportunities—steps toward an open, standards-based metaverse that many view as the internet&#8217;s natural evolution into the Spatial Web.</p>
<p>The Forum serves as a collaborative platform that enhances and accelerates the work of standards organizations by facilitating broader exploration of interoperability in metaverse development. While the Forum does not create standards itself, it actively supports standards organizations in their mission to build an interoperable, open metaverse. As illustrated in the figure below, the Forum&#8217;s activities are structured around two key phases: pre-standardization and post-standardization.</p>
<div id="attachment_14484" style="width: 833px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-14484" class="wp-image-14484 size-full" src="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig1.jpg" alt="" width="823" height="261" srcset="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig1.jpg 823w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig1-480x152.jpg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) 823px, 100vw" /><p id="caption-attachment-14484" class="wp-caption-text">Figure 1: Metaverse Standards Forum pre- and post-standardization activities</p></div>
<p>The Forum fills a unique pre-standardization role by bridging a critical gap in the interoperability timeline—the period after a technology and its need have been proven but before formal standards exist. Through its post-standardization activities, the Forum helps ensure deployed standards effectively meet industry needs. By fostering communication across traditional standardization boundaries, the Forum identifies overlooked opportunities for cross-domain collaboration and supports SDOs in developing effective interoperability standards.</p>
<h2>Forum Organization</h2>
<p>Any young organization must organize effectively to make an impact. The Forum&#8217;s governance structure includes a board of elected directors and officers who champion the interests of its members. This board convenes monthly to strategize on optimal resource allocation to maximize return on investment for both members and the broader industry.</p>
<p>As a non-profit organization, the Forum is a means rather than an end in itself, and so the Forum maintains deliberately inclusive participation policies—requiring no NDAs, patent licensing obligations, or participation fees for many of its activities, including Domain Groups where detailed interoperability discussions and activities are held. While core activities remain freely accessible, the Forum requires funding to operate and achieve its goals. To this end, it offers a paid &#8216;Principal Member&#8217; tier through which organizations can support Forum activities. In return, Principal Members gain a voice in guiding the Forum&#8217;s work through oversight of Domain Groups, the right to vote and stand in Board elections, and priority marketing considerations.</p>
<div id="attachment_14485" style="width: 825px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-14485" class="wp-image-14485 size-full" src="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig2.jpg" alt="" width="815" height="382" srcset="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig2.jpg 815w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig2-480x225.jpg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) 815px, 100vw" /><p id="caption-attachment-14485" class="wp-caption-text">Figure 2: Metaverse Standards Forum Organizational Structure</p></div>
<p>The Forum has 2,613 member organizations headquartered across five geographic regions, representing international participation from a truly global ecosystem.</p>
<div id="attachment_14486" style="width: 553px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-14486" class="wp-image-14486 size-full" src="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig3.jpg" alt="" width="543" height="405" srcset="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig3.jpg 543w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig3-480x358.jpg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) 543px, 100vw" /><p id="caption-attachment-14486" class="wp-caption-text">Figure 3. Distribution of Forum Membership by Geographic Region</p></div>
<p>The Forum&#8217;s diverse membership spans 76 major organizations, thousands of smaller entities, and over 4,000 individual professionals who have registered through the member portal—all united by their commitment to advancing interoperability and standards development.</p>
<h2>Domain Group Process</h2>
<p>Since its inception, the Forum has established agile, pre-standardization collaboration processes that serve its diverse membership. It focuses on practical, fast-moving initiatives through regular Working Group meetings, with priorities emerging organically from members to ensure industry relevance. As illustrated in the figure below, Forum members advance their ideas and interests through a Domain Group process, where Exploratory Groups develop Working Group charters by consensus. Through its Domain Groups, the Forum develops cross-disciplinary use cases and requirements, providing standards bodies with valuable insights to ensure their work delivers real-world impact.</p>
<div id="attachment_14487" style="width: 725px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-14487" class="wp-image-14487 size-full" src="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig4.jpg" alt="" width="715" height="323" srcset="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig4.jpg 715w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig4-480x217.jpg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) 715px, 100vw" /><p id="caption-attachment-14487" class="wp-caption-text">Figure 4: Metaverse Standards Forum Domain Group Process</p></div>
<p>The Forum&#8217;s Domain Group Process stands as a cornerstone of its activities, ensuring all members can shape Forum priorities and activities, while maintaining the Forum&#8217;s focus on pragmatic projects and deliverables that address urgent metaverse interoperability needs. Members actively generate new ideas for Forum initiatives—in just one year, nearly 250 ideas have been organized into more than 20 domains of interest. Members can align themselves with these domains and upvote topics for Exploratory Group consideration. The figure below lists the topics for which Working Groups have formed or are being proposed. Through its pipeline of member-driven Domain Groups, the Forum has cultivated an unprecedented level of open dialogue between the standards community and broader industry.</p>
<div id="attachment_14488" style="width: 904px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-14488" class="wp-image-14488 size-full" src="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig5.jpg" alt="" width="894" height="415" srcset="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig5.jpg 894w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig5-480x223.jpg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) 894px, 100vw" /><p id="caption-attachment-14488" class="wp-caption-text">Figure 5: Metaverse Standards Forum Domain Groups at the end of 2024</p></div>
<h2>Forum Effectiveness</h2>
<p>The Forum&#8217;s remarkable growth presents both opportunities and challenges. With our extensive membership and numerous activities, members can find it challenging to identify the groups and projects that will best serve their organizations. To streamline participation, we provide a comprehensive member website and portal detailing ongoing projects and groups. Our managing director hosts monthly orientation sessions for new members, supported by detailed guides and documented best practices to help members engage effectively.</p>
<p>Given the metaverse&#8217;s technological breadth and our global membership, accommodating diverse interests across time zones requires careful planning. We conduct well-attended monthly plenary meetings, twice on the same day to enable worldwide participation, while Principal Members participate in additional monthly oversight meetings to oversee Domain Group activities. All meeting materials, recordings, and minutes are openly available online to all members at any time.</p>
<p>We continue to strengthen coordination between Domain Groups with adjacent interests. Quarterly progress review meetings for Working Group chairs complement ongoing efforts to align and enhance Domain Group activities, ensuring effective collaboration across the Forum&#8217;s initiatives.</p>
<p>The Forum Standards Register Working Group plays a vital role in promoting visibility, coordination, and cooperation across Domain Groups. Through its database, the group tracks metaverse-relevant standardization activities and key standards throughout the industry, helping organizations navigate the complex standardization landscape. The Working Group is also developing a comprehensive database of metaverse use cases and a standardized glossary. This work ensures consistent terminology across Forum activities while supporting broader industry alignment through collaboration with initiatives working to establish common language for use cases, requirements, and projects.</p>
<div id="attachment_14489" style="width: 872px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-14489" class="wp-image-14489 size-full" src="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig6.jpg" alt="" width="862" height="346" srcset="https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig6.jpg 862w, https://metaverse-standards.org/wp-content/uploads/2024_Annual_Report-Fig6-480x193.jpg 480w" sizes="(min-width: 0px) and (max-width: 480px) 480px, (min-width: 481px) 862px, 100vw" /><p id="caption-attachment-14489" class="wp-caption-text">Figure 6. Process for populating the Metaverse Standards Forum Standards Register</p></div>
<h2>Global Engagement</h2>
<p>Since its incorporation, the Forum has achieved significant milestones and emerged as a leading voice in discussions about open and interoperable metaverse technologies through media engagement, events, content creation, social media presence, and educational initiatives.</p>
<p>The Forum has garnered substantial industry attention, generating 1,234 pieces of global media coverage from prominent outlets including VentureBeat, Reuters, Forbes, Decrypt, and Immersive Wire. This extensive coverage across mainstream and specialized tech media demonstrates the Forum&#8217;s growing influence in metaverse development.</p>
<p>Forum members have shared their expertise through numerous digital platforms, participating in prominent podcasts and webinars such as Voices of VR, 80 Level, Meta Minutes, ACM Bytecast, and XR Today. The Forum&#8217;s work has been featured in major analyst research and forecast reports, with leadership maintaining active dialogue with leading industry analysts including Forrester, McKinsey, Gartner, and others. The Forum&#8217;s digital presence continues to grow, with nearly 13,000 followers across LinkedIn, Bluesky, Mastodon, and YouTube.</p>
<p>The Forum&#8217;s influence extends to major industry events, where members have contributed to dozens of panels, presentations, and networking sessions at prestigious gatherings including CES, Mobile World Congress, SXSW, SIGGRAPH, and SIGGRAPH Asia. Members have also presented at numerous Standards Development Organization meetings, including ISO/IEC JTC1, IEEE, ITU, and W3C, including efforts to support the UN&#8217;s Sustainable Development Goals, ensuring open metaverse standards discussions reach all stakeholders.</p>
<p>The Forum&#8217;s innovative work earned recognition as one of Fast Company&#8217;s ten World-Changing Ideas in the Experimental category for 2023. Its <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/presentations-videos/">YouTube channel</a> serves as a comprehensive public resource, featuring presentations from industry experts, events and Domain Group speakers.</p>
<p>In late 2024, the Forum launched a series of open Town Hall meetings focused on vital metaverse topics. The first two sessions—exploring Volumetric Media and OMA3&#8217;s Inter World Portaling System—drew significant community and attendance.</p>
<h2>Challenges and Opportunities</h2>
<p>Despite strong momentum and participation, the Forum is navigating challenges in its core mission: promoting cooperation to encourage and inform the development of interoperability standards for the immersive web. Looking ahead to 2025, the Forum&#8217;s leadership is committed to continue transforming these challenges into opportunities to benefit the broader industry.</p>
<p>The term &#8216;metaverse&#8217; has weathered a significant hype cycle, where inconsistent definitions led to confusion and premature declarations of its demise. The surge in AI interest has further complicated the narrative, with some suggesting AI has superseded the metaverse as a transformative technology. However, viewing the metaverse through the Forum&#8217;s inclusive definition—the convergence of web connectivity with spatial computing—reveals that activity in this space is not only continuing but accelerating. AI serves as an enabler, enhancing metaverse capabilities, while the metaverse will often provide a natural interface for AI interactions and agents. The Forum will intensify its efforts to show how AI and the metaverse are interconnected technologies that enhance and amplify each other.</p>
<p>While the term &#8216;metaverse&#8217; may currently carry baggage from its hype cycle, the underlying technological convergence it represents remains vibrant and growing. Until a more precise term emerges, the Forum will continue to focus on educating the industry about the concrete and significant capabilities being developed, rather than debating the term itself.</p>
<p>While the late 2021 surge in metaverse interest sparked numerous initiatives—many of which have since ceased—the Forum remains focused on strengthening its industry relevance through a unique approach: concentrating on pre- and post-standardization activities for the emerging immersive web. Rather than debating theoretical long-term roadmaps, the Forum encourages the natural member-driven evolution of pragmatic projects that create immediate business opportunities through growing interoperability.</p>
<p>Like many startups, the Forum faces ongoing funding challenges. We are focused on delivering strong, tangible value to our members to encourage Principal Member participation and financial support, while exploring additional revenue sources—including grants and collaborations for projects where the Forum&#8217;s unique capabilities and broad industry participation can create distinctive value.</p>
<h2>The Forum’s Elected Board of Directors</h2>
<p>In April 2024, the Metaverse Standards Forum marked its first anniversary of incorporation with the installation of a newly elected Board of Directors—a pivotal moment in its mission to advance interoperability standards for an open and inclusive metaverse.<br />The 19-member Board brings together distinguished leaders from prominent organizations, representing a comprehensive range of metaverse-related expertise: generative AI research, 3D geospatial technology, systems architecture, standardization, network technology, AR, VR, multimedia, and the legal and privacy considerations of emerging technologies. This Board oversees the Forum&#8217;s core mission of providing a neutral venue where standards organizations and companies can collaborate to develop interoperability standards for an open metaverse.</p>
<p>The Board&#8217;s executive leadership comprises four officers: Neil Trevett as president, Emily Stearns as executive director, Christine Perey as secretary, and Yu Yuan as treasurer. More details on Board members are provided below:</p>
<ul>
<li>Matt White | CEO, Berkeley Synthetic &#8211; An AI and simulation researcher, Matt is known for successfully deploying large-scale AI and simulation platforms across the telecom, gaming, media, and entertainment industries.</li>
<li>Patrick Cozzi | CEO, Cesium &#8211; Patrick is dedicated to advancing the field of 3D geospatial and is a recognized expert in 3D graphics and mapping technology, open standards, and open-source software.</li>
<li>Eric Klein | co-founder Cloudonix, Inc. &#8211; Eric has over 30 years of experience in telecommunications, mobile, and networking. He is a mentor, community advocate, writer and strategic advisor across many aspects of technology and he currently serves as the chair of the Technical Interoperability and End User Troubleshooting Exploratory Working Group at the Forum.</li>
<li>Leonard Daly | Daly Realism &#8211; Leonard has a long career in 3D graphics and open standards and specializes in 3D systems design.</li>
<li>Liam Broza | co-founder, Ethereal Engine &#8211; working on the intersection of spatial computing, computer vision, and data sovereignty, Liam’s work focuses on building the open social, spatial web for all.</li>
<li>Mats Lundgren | Futurewei Technologies’ director open source technology strategy &#8211; Mats has 20 years of experience in telecommunications, mobile, and wireless.</li>
<li>Rouslan Ovtcharoff | founder and CEO, Groovesetter &#8211; Rouslan brings a passion for blockchain technologies and expertise in film and television production, distribution, advertising, XR, and interactive media. He is also the co-founder of the Blockchain Global Entertainment Alliance, a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting blockchain education, adoption and common standards in the entertainment industry.</li>
<li>Paul Higgs | Huawei Vice President of Video Industry Development &#8211; Paul brings 20+ years of experience in systems architecture, engineering, and development management for next-gen technology to the table.</li>
<li>William Benman JD | CEO of Integrated Virtual Networks and Web3D Consortium Board Member &#8211; Bill is the inventor of multiple patents on IVN’s Silhouette® Technology and has experience in telecommunications, aerospace, and intellectual property law.</li>
<li>Fred Chesbro, Esq. | Co-founder, Metaverse Radio WMVR-db Chicago &#8211; Championing the intersection of creativity in the digital frontier while covering events and hosting ongoing conversations about the metaverse’s potential for advancing music, visual arts, and literature.</li>
<li>Ulrich Dropmann | Nokia Head of Standardization and Industry Environment &#8211; Ulrich heads external standardization engagement and is responsible for global and regional standardization, including radio spectrum aspects.</li>
<li>Alfred Tom | Executive Director, OMA3, President of Lumian Foundation, and CEO of Wivity &#8211; Alfred has run multiple consortia and helped create several industry standards, including SunSpec Alliance, Car Connectivity Consortium, GENIVI, PC Card, and IrDA. His current focus is assisting Web3 consortia and DAOs operate.</li>
<li>Christine Perey | President, PEREY Research &amp; Consulting &#8211; Christine specializes in helping organizations identify new opportunities for Augmented Reality in industrial and enterprise use cases.</li>
<li>Ben Erwin | owner, Powersimple, LLC &#8211; Dedicated to the advancement of the XR industry, Ben has developed the advocacy and recognition platform The Polys &#8211; WebXR Awards, the WebXR Summit Series, and MetaTr@aversal, which have created engagement and awareness of the immersive web.</li>
<li>Thomas Stockhammer | Qualcomm Senior Director of Technical Standards &#8211; Thomas is an award-winning tech and standards leader in mobile multimedia, TV, adaptive video streaming, 5G Broadcast, XR technologies, and is also IEEE Fellow.</li>
<li>Virginie Maillard | SIEMENS Head of Technology Field Simulation and Digital Twin &#8211; Virginie leads tech research in the US and serves as the global Head of research in Simulation and Digital Twins.</li>
<li>Marc Petit | Principal Consultant, TRNSFRM Inc &#8211; Marc is a co-founder of Building the Open Metaverse podcast and serves as co-chair for the 3D Asset Interoperability Working Group. Marc spent 35 years in computer graphics at TDI, SOFTIMAGE, Autodesk, Fabric Engine, and most recently, Epic Games.</li>
<li>Yu Yuan | Co-founder of VerseMaker and CEO of 0xSenses &#8211; Yu is a visionary scientist, inventor, entrepreneur, and investor in the areas of Virtual Reality, Metaverse, and Digital Transformation. He has held a variety of leadership roles, including but not limited to Founder and Acting President of the Metaverse Acceleration and Sustainability Association (MASA), Treasurer of the Metaverse Standards Forum, President of the IEEE Standards Association, and Member of the IEEE Board of Directors.</li>
<li>Elizabeth Rothman | XRSI.ORG Senior Legal Affairs and Digital Trust Advisor &#8211; Elizabeth is an attorney and advisor in emerging technology, often working at the forefront of legal, privacy, and safety concerns presented by the implementation and convergence of technologies in digital environments.</li>
</ul>
<p>The Forum sincerely thanks all Board members for their generous donation of time and expertise to further the Forum’s mission.</p>
<h2>Looking Ahead</h2>
<p>2024 has marked unprecedented advances in technologies and applications shaping the metaverse—a rapidly emerging global platform for connected spatial computing. The rise of AI has proved especially transformative, unlocking new applications that solve real challenges in both consumer and industrial domains. This accelerating progress strengthens our commitment to ensure the standards community comprehensively supports metaverse development, enabling its revolutionary potential to become reality.</p>
<p>As we mark our first year as an incorporated entity, we deeply value our members&#8217; contributions and extend an open invitation to all organizations to join the Forum. Our Domain Groups offer members the opportunity to propose, lead, and participate in initiatives that advance both their own missions and the broader metaverse ecosystem. We particularly welcome new Principal Members who can help shape our direction and sustain our ongoing work.</p>
<p>Together, we will continue advancing standard protocols and interfaces for an open and interoperable metaverse in 2025 and beyond!</p></div>
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<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-2024-annual-report/">Metaverse Standards Forum 2024 Annual Report</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
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		<title>Metaverse Standards Forum Incorporates</title>
		<link>https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-incorporates/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jriordon]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Apr 2023 13:00:37 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Less than a year after its initial launch, the Metaverse Standards Forum™announces that it is now incorporated as an independent non-profit industry consortium. The Forum’s mission continues unchanged—to enable, foster and promote cooperation and coordination over metaverse-related interoperability between standards organizations, companies, and universities.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-incorporates/">Metaverse Standards Forum Incorporates</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
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<p><em>After nine months of incubation under the Khronos Group, the Metaverse Standards Forum has become an independent industry consortium</em></p>
<p><strong>Beaverton, OR – April 18, 2023 – </strong>Less than a year after its initial launch, the Metaverse Standards Forum™announces that it is now incorporated as an independent non-profit industry consortium. The Forum’s mission continues unchanged—to enable, foster and promote cooperation and coordination over metaverse-related interoperability between standards organizations, companies, and universities. In June 2022, the Forum was launched and driven by the Khronos® Group. Today, with over 2,400 members and multiple active Working and Exploratory Groups focused on driving pragmatic interoperability advances, the Metaverse Standards Forum has organized its own governance, finances, and operations. Working Group activities remain freely accessible to any member, while new paid membership tiers enable members to be elected to leadership roles in the Forum while funding Forum projects.</p>
<p>“Interoperability is the key to the metaverse scaling to its full potential beyond siloed games, experiences, and worlds, and the unprecedented level of participation in the Forum demonstrates strong industry interest in the broad cooperation necessary to bring that vision to life,” says Neil Trevett, president of the Khronos Group and initial president of the Metaverse Standards Forum. “The Forum does not itself develop standards but exists to help accelerate the mission of any industry initiative working for metaverse interoperability through fostering participation, building cooperative consensus and insights, and driving wider visibility for their efforts. We invite all interested organizations to participate in the now fully independent Forum.”</p>
<p>The Metaverse Standards Forum launched with 37 founding members and has grown to include a diverse range of standards organizations and companies, industry consortia, platform vendors, hardware manufacturers, and end-user organizations. The Forum maintains a <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/domain-groups/">pipeline of member-driven Exploratory and Working Groups</a> to address metaverse interoperability challenges and opportunities across multiple domains that have been prioritized by the Forum membership. As the Forum does not create standards, participation creates no patent licensing obligations. All Members are enabled to participate in Forum Working Group meetings and Forum activities are non-confidential, with all deliverables being freely and publicly distributed.</p>
<p>Forum Working Groups operate under member-created charters that define pragmatic short-term projects that prioritize generating interoperability requirements and testing results to assist member organizations accelerate their goals. The first Working Groups include:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Metaverse Standards Register</strong> building a public database mapping the landscape of metaverse-related standardization activities and open standards.</li>
<li><strong>3D Asset Interoperability</strong> enabling alignment and cooperation between the USD and glTF™ 3D file formats.</li>
<li><strong>Real/Virtual World Integration</strong> examining and encouraging interoperability for use cases such as digital twins and visual positioning</li>
<li><strong>Asset Management </strong>exploring the digital rights standards landscape for identity, ownership, protection, transport, exchange, and monetization of digital virtual assets.</li>
</ul>
<p>In addition, multiple Forum Exploratory Groups are building consensus on charters for upcoming Working Groups, including: 3D web interoperability, interoperable avatars and characters, digital fashion and wearables, metaverse network requirements, end-user troubleshooting, and metaverse privacy, cybersecurity, and identity. Any Forum member may propose, participate in, or stand for election to lead a domain Working Group.</p>
<p>As a newly independent non-profit organization, the Metaverse Standards Forum’s membership structure will evolve over the coming months. New members may immediately join the organization as Participant or Principal members. Current members will be offered continuing membership privileges for a transitional period. Principal members play a key leadership role in the Forum, enjoy priority marketing and networking privileges, and may stand for election to the Forum Board of Directors. Principal membership dues have been carefully tiered to enable and encourage participation by organizations of all types and sizes.</p>
<p>Membership in the Metaverse Standards Forum is open to all. More information and pricing details can be found at <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/members/">https://metaverse-standards.org/members/</a>.</p>
<h3>About the Metaverse Standards Forum</h3>
<p>The Metaverse Standards Forum is a non-profit consortium dedicated to fostering metaverse interoperability. Open to all organizations of any size, including standards organizations, companies, and universities, the Forum is committed to promoting open standards, collaboration and best practices to pave the way for an open, inclusive and accessible metaverse. Metaverse Standards Forum members engage in building consensus on interoperability requirements, prototyping, plugfests, and open-source tool development. Learn more at <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/">metaverse-standards.org</a>, and follow the Metaverse Standards Forum on Twitter <a href="https://twitter.com/metaverse_forum">@metaverse_forum.</a></p></div>
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<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/metaverse-standards-forum-incorporates/">Metaverse Standards Forum Incorporates</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
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		<title>Leading Standards Organizations and Companies Unite to Drive Open Metaverse Interoperability</title>
		<link>https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/leading-standards-organizations-and-companies-unite-to-drive-open-metaverse-interoperability/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeffrey Phillips]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Jun 2022 06:00:28 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Press Releases]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>The Metaverse Standards Forum brings together leading standards organizations and companies for industry-wide cooperation on interoperability standards needed to build the open metaverse. The Forum will explore where the lack of interoperability is holding back metaverse deployment and how the work of Standards Developing Organizations (SDOs) defining and evolving needed standards may be coordinated and accelerated.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/leading-standards-organizations-and-companies-unite-to-drive-open-metaverse-interoperability/">Leading Standards Organizations and Companies Unite to Drive Open Metaverse Interoperability</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
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				<div class="et_pb_text_inner"><a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/领先的标准组织和公司联合起来推动开放的元宇宙/">中文</a> / <a href="https://jp.khronos.org/news/press/Metaverse-Standards-Forum-2022">日本語</a></p>
<p><i>Metaverse Standards Forum to foster the development of open standards for the metaverse; Membership is free and open to any organization. Founding members include: 0xSenses, Academy Software Foundation, Adobe, Alibaba, Autodesk, Avataar, Blackshark.ai, CalConnect, Cesium, Daly Realism, Disguise, the Enosema Foundation, Epic Games, the Express Language Foundation, Huawei, IKEA, John Peddie Research, Khronos, Lamina1, Maxon, Meta, Microsoft, NVIDIA, OpenAR Cloud, the Open Geospatial Consortium, Otoy, Perey Research and Consulting, Qualcomm Technologies, Ribose, Sony Interactive Entertainment, Spatial Web Foundation, Unity, VerseMaker, Wayfair, the Web3D Consortium, the World Wide Web Consortium, and the XR Association (XRA)</i></p>
<p><b>June 21st,</b> <b>2022 </b>– Announced today, <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/"><b>The Metaverse Standards Forum</b></a> brings together leading standards organizations and companies for industry-wide cooperation on interoperability standards needed to build the open metaverse. The Forum will explore where the lack of interoperability is holding back metaverse deployment and how the work of Standards Developing Organizations (SDOs) defining and evolving needed standards may be coordinated and accelerated. Open to any organization at no cost, the Forum will focus on pragmatic, action-based projects such as implementation prototyping, hackathons, plugfests, and open-source tooling to accelerate the testing and adoption of metaverse standards, while also developing consistent terminology and deployment guidelines.</p>
<p>The metaverse is motivating the novel integration and deployment of diverse technologies for collaborative spatial computing, such as interactive 3D graphics, augmented and virtual reality, photorealistic content authoring, geospatial systems, end-user content tooling, digital twins, real-time collaboration, physical simulation, online economies, multi-user gaming, and more – at new levels of scale and immersiveness.</p>
<p>Multiple industry leaders have stated that the potential of the metaverse will be best realized if it is built on a foundation of open standards. Building an open and inclusive metaverse at pervasive scale will demand a constellation of open interoperability standards created by SDOs such as The Khronos Group, the World Wide Web Consortium, the Open Geospatial Consortium, the Open AR Cloud, the Spatial Web Foundation, and many others. The Metaverse Standards Forum aims to foster consensus-based cooperation between diverse SDOs and companies to define and align requirements and priorities for metaverse standards—accelerating their availability and reducing duplication of effort across the industry.</p>
<p>&#8220;The metaverse will bring together diverse technologies, requiring a constellation of interoperability standards, created and maintained by many standards organizations,” said Neil Trevett, Khronos president. &#8220;The Metaverse Standards Forum is a unique venue for coordination between standards organizations and industry, with a mission to foster the pragmatic and timely standardization that will be essential to an open and inclusive metaverse.&#8221;</p>
<p>Hosted by the Khronos Group, the Forum is open to any company, standards organization, or university at no charge through a simple click-through <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/join/membership-application-form/">Participant Agreement</a>. Companies that wish to provide Forum oversight, and may wish to fund Forum projects, can choose to become a <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/join/membership-application-form/">Principal</a> member.</p>
<p>The activities of the Forum will be directed by the needs and interests of its members and may involve diverse technology domains such as 3D assets and rendering, human interface and interaction paradigms such as AR and VR, user created content, avatars, identity management, privacy, and financial transactions. Forum meetings are expected to start in July 2022. More information on joining can be found at <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/">metaverse-standards.org</a>.</p>
<h3 id="found_members_quotes"><b>Forum Founding Members Statements of Support</b></h3>
<p>&#8220;Technology and standards are the bricks and cement of the metaverse,&#8221; said <b>Qi Wang, assistant president and head of healthcare and cognitive psychology lab at 0xSenses</b>. &#8220;Safe, reliable, and ethical interoperability is especially important as humans become part of the metaverse. 0xSenses is thrilled to join the Metaverse Standards Forum as a founding ​​principal to help make the metaverse dreams come true faster and better.&#8221;</p>
<p>“The Academy Software Foundation is pleased to join the Metaverse Standard Forum as a Founding member, because open source software developed by motion picture industry engineers can contribute building blocks for the Metaverse,&#8221; said <b>David Morin, executive director of Academy Software Foundation (ASWF)</b>. When it comes to building strange new worlds and boldly go where no one has gone before, count us in.”</p>
<p>&#8220;Adobe is excited to join the Metaverse Standards Forum,” said <b>Stefano Corazza, vice president and fellow of AR at Adobe</b>. “It is in our history to contribute to the industry by defining foundational standards for digital experiences, as we did with PDF and DNG. Establishing standards is essential to foster collaboration in the Metaverse, and to allow this new ecosystem to truly flourish.&#8221;</p>
<p>“Alibaba is pleased to join The Metaverse Standards Forum which encourages collaboration on interoperability standards of the open metaverse,” said <b>Dr Tan Ping, head of XR Lab, Alibaba DAMO Academy</b>. “We look forward to sharing our technology knowhow and joining global industry leaders to accelerate constructive dialogues to advance new initiatives in the metaverse space.”</p>
<p>“We are thrilled to be a founding member of the Metaverse Standards Forum as it fosters open standards and collaboration that will unlock the full potential of metaverse experiences,” said <b>Eric Bourque, vice president of Engineering, Media &amp; Entertainment, Autodesk.</b> “The future of design and make is the industrial metaverse where designers, builders, manufacturers and content creators can make better, more informed decisions quickly.”</p>
<p>“Avataar is extremely excited and proud to be taking part in The Metaverse Standards forum to bring about interoperability standards across metaverse ecosystems,” said<b> Sravanth Aluru, CEO &amp; founder of Avataar</b>. “We believe there is a need for technical products to solve the challenges we face in making the end user experience seamless &amp; scalable and our deep-tech platform is on that path. We look forward to collaborating with the esteemed partners in the forum to build these standards.”</p>
<p>“The metaverse will ultimately encompass all our activities and support them with applications. Just like standardization has been an important foundation for open knowledge sharing and rapid development in the Web age, the same is true for the Metaverse. Blackshark is pleased to contribute to this success by participating in the Metaverse Standards Forum,” said <b>Arno Hollosi, CTO at Blackshark.ai</b>.</p>
<p>&#8220;CalConnect focuses on creating standards that enable interoperable collaboration, with some of our key standards like vCard and iCalendar in use across billions of devices today”, said<b> Gershon Janssen, president of CalConnect</b>. “CalConnect is delighted to join fellow standards organizations in ensuring the interoperability of the Metaverse.”</p>
<p>“The Internet is built on open standards and interoperability for the benefit of all participants. As we move into the era of 3D-centric computing, we must build the metaverse in the same manner. I can’t think of a better home than Khronos to host the Metaverse Standards Forum to facilitate pragmatic collaboration among the community for open standards for the metaverse, especially  for 3D assets, which will become as pervasive as image and video media types on the web today. Cesium is thrilled to join as a Founding ​​Principal as we lay the foundations for the metaverse for decades to come,” said <b>Patrick Cozzi, CEO at Cesium</b>.</p>
<p>“disguise is excited to join the Metaverse Standardization Forum,&#8221; said<b> Ed Plowman, CTO of disguise</b>. “disguise believes that the Metaverse should be open, inclusive and collaborative and that can only be achieved if we get together and focus on standards, connectivity and interoperability.”</p>
<p>&#8220;Semantic insights from terminologies and vocabularies serve as the basis for any new initiative,&#8221; said <b>Reese Plews, president of the Enosema Foundation</b>. &#8220;The Enosema Foundation is excited to join the Metaverse Standards Forum and standardize core vocabularies based on best practices that enable disruptive opportunities in the metaverse.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;We are thrilled to help launch the Metaverse Standards Forum, a collaborative industry-led effort founded to accelerate the development and adoption of interoperability standards,&#8221; said <b>Marc Petit, vice president of Unreal Engine ecosystem at Epic Games</b>. &#8220;Our goal is to build an open metaverse that enriches humanity and is home to a thriving, fair ecosystem with millions of creators.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;The Metaverse is the new frontier for the expression of information. As an organization supporting the EXPRESS language used to great success in the aerospace, automotive and construction industries, we are excited to work with like-minded standardization and commercial organizations in setting standards to bridge the physical and the virtual worlds,” said <b>Thomas Thurman, president of the EXPRESS Language Foundation</b>.</p>
<p>“Huawei is very glad to join the Metaverse Standards Forum as we believe that the metaverse industry and ecosystem will benefit from the collaborative actions and open standards,” said <b>Xiao Ran, vice president of Huawei&#8217;s Corporate Strategy and Industry Development</b>. “We look forward to cooperating with the leading SDO’s and industry partners to accelerate the open interoperability standards for metaverse and contribute our experiences.”</p>
<p>“IKEA is looking forward to this Metaverse Standards Forum as we believe that the way to democratize metaverse and spatial computing is to have many open standards that work well together,” says <b>Martin Enthed, innovation manager at IKEA Marketing &amp; Communication AB</b>. “This forum we hope will be a place where that coordination could happen between SDO’s, industry, and where IKEA can contribute with the use cases and experiences from our industry.”</p>
<p>“We are proud to be a founding member of this vitally important new forum for ideas, clarifications, direction and definition of what the Metaverse will be and can be,” said <b>Dr. Jon Peddie, president of Jon Peddie Research</b>. “The foundational elements have been in development for some time and now the interoperability and interconnectivity is possible. Khronos will help ensure it is open, smoothly implemented, and takes advantage of the collective minds of the industry just as they have in other areas.”</p>
<p>“Lamina1 is committed to an open Metaverse for all— controlled by no one, with no barriers to entry, and where creators from all walks of life can succeed and thrive,” said <b>Tony Parisi, chief strategy officer at Lamina1.</b> “We are excited to work in collaboration with industry leaders to define the interoperable standards and infrastructure that empower real-time 3D for community, communication and commerce on a global scale.”</p>
<p>“Maxon is pleased to be an initial member of the Metaverse Standards Forum. We believe strongly in cultivating a collaborative, artist-driven, inclusive foundation to bolster the implementation and adoption of interoperability standards,&#8221; <b>said David McGavran, CEO of Maxon.</b> “We see standardization as a catalyst for creativity, growth, innovation and unlimited possibility for this inspiring new ecosystem.”</p>
<p>“Building a metaverse for everyone will require an industry-wide focus on common standards. The Metaverse Standards Forum can drive the collaboration that’s needed to make this possible, and Meta is committed to this work. Creators, developers and companies will all benefit from the technologies and experiences that will be made possible by common protocols,” said <b>Vishal Shah, vice president of Metaverse at Meta.</b></p>
<p>“NVIDIA understands the metaverse as an evolution of the Internet — from today’s 2D view of the web to an immersive 3D spatial overlay,” said <b>Rev Lebaredian, vice president, Omniverse &amp; Simulation Technology at NVIDIA</b>. “For the metaverse to be successful and ubiquitous, it must be built on open standards, just like today’s 2D web — and our joining the Metaverse Standards Forum will help the community usher in a new era of collaborative and open 3D standards that will form the foundation of the metaverse.”</p>
<p>“The Open AR Cloud Association (OARC) sees the Metaverse Standards Forum as a much needed practical approach to accelerate coordination across industries and initiatives. We believe technologies which promote open standards, interoperability, privacy, and security are needed for a real-world Metaverse or Spatial Web. Since 2018 OARC’s mission has been to advocate for, build consensus for, and contribute to such efforts. We are happy to offer our full support for the Metaverse Standards Forum,” said <b>Jan-Erik Vinje, managing director of OARC.</b></p>
<p>“OGC is very pleased to join the Metaverse Standards Forum with our partner organizations,” said <strong>Dr. </strong><b>Nadine Alameh, Open Geospatial Consortium president</b>. “We look forward to providing our consortium&#8217;s collective expertise in the geospatial and location fields as part of these partnerships across Standards Development Organizations, industry, and more to ensure the emerging metaverse is as relevant and as open as possible.”</p>
<p>“As we enter a new era of spatial computing and holographic mixed reality, OTOY is thrilled to contribute to the Metaverse Standards Forum,&#8221; said <b>Jules Urbach, CEO and founder of OTOY Inc.</b> &#8220;Open standards developed in collaboration with the leading SDO will provide a framework for building an open metaverse that has the potential to reshape how we communicate, transform our creative economy, and power new industries built on advanced 3D visualization. We are looking forward to collaborating with industry leaders in the Metaverse Standards Forum, contributing our experiences at the forefront of 3D graphics and blockchain cloud computing.&#8221;</p>
<p>“As a metaverse enabler and provider of key technology to the ecosystem, Qualcomm Technologies believes in taking an open platform approach and interoperable metaverse,” said <b>Hugo Swart, vice president and general manager of XR, Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. </b>“We are thrilled to join the Metaverse Standards Forum to help define standards for the metaverse to flourish with a healthy ecosystem, and help creators pioneer innovative experiences that will lead the next generation of immersive technology.”</p>
<p>“An open and interoperable Metaverse benefits all without discrimination. As a pioneer of SMART standards, Ribose has been a trusted partner of international, national and industry standardization bodies in their development and deployment of machine-readable standards: from ISO to ITU, BSI to NIST, CalConnect to OGC,” said <b>Ronald Tse, founder of Ribose</b>. “We are excited to join fellow standards bodies and makers in creating standards and technologies critical to interoperability across the Metaverse.”</p>
<p>“The Spatial Web Foundation is excited to join the Metaverse Standards Forum to collaborate with the world’s leading standards organizations to accelerate the critical interoperability standards needed for metaverse applications and across the broader Spatial Web,” said<b> Gabriel Rene, Spatial Web Foundation executive director</b>.</p>
<p>“Unity is committed to helping solve challenges customers face today for creating and sharing the rich content needed for film, gaming, advertising and digital twin experiences,” said <b>Allan Poore, SVP of professional artistry at Unity</b>, “We look forward to partnering with the Metaverse Standards Forum to extend USD as the future for rich interoperability across tools and workflows in the industry.”</p>
<p>&#8220;VerseMaker is committed to becoming a bridge and catalyst for China&#8217;s research and development, education and training, large enterprises, start-up companies, and investment institutions to participate in the global metaverse innovation and cooperation ecosystem,&#8221; said <b>Dr. Yu Yuan, co-founder of VerseMaker</b>. &#8220;Standardization is the underlying driving force for the development of the global metaverse industry. An open and cooperative ecosystem based on standards is the common vision of the global metaverse industry. We are thrilled to be a founding ​​principal of the Metaverse Standards Forum and jointly create the future of the global metaverse industry.&#8221;</p>
<p>“Wayfair, with our mission to help people create their feeling of home, whether in physical or virtual spaces, is proud to be a founding member of the Metaverse Standards Forum,” said <b>Shrenik Sadalgi, director of research and development at Wayfair &amp; founding chair of the Khronos 3D Commerce Working Group</b>. “Together with the other participating members we are excited to take on a leadership role in the creation of these new standards and help chart the path forward to a truly open metaverse.”</p>
<p>“The Metaverse Standards Forum provides a unique opportunity to achieve secure, collaborative (interoperable), durable, and pervasive Mixed-Reality content,” said <b>Nicholas Polys Ph.D., president of the Web3D Consortium</b>. The Web3D Consortium members bring decades of prior research into 3D graphics interoperability and WWW ecosystem standardizations; integration with ISO-IEC Extensible 3D (X3D) Version 4 will bring quick wins that catalyze new value and provide crucial assurances for Metaverse creators and participants.”</p>
<p>“The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is joining the Metaverse Standards Forum to accelerate the coordination with other standards organizations and metaverse stakeholders in building an interoperable platform for the metaverse, in which W3C&#8217;s Immersive Web vision is set to play a critical role,” said <b>Dominique Hazaël-Massieux, W3C immersive web strategist</b>.</p>
<p>“XR Association is pleased to be part of this prestigious collaborative effort to design the XR standards framework,” said <b>Stephanie Montgomery, vice president of Research and Best Practices at XRA.</b> “Our mission is the responsible development and advancement of XR.  Through the Metaverse Standards Forum we will contribute to common protocols, interoperability and shared understanding, thereby responsibly improving technological efficiencies and advancing XR technology to new levels of delight.”</div>
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<p>The post <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org/news/press-releases/leading-standards-organizations-and-companies-unite-to-drive-open-metaverse-interoperability/">Leading Standards Organizations and Companies Unite to Drive Open Metaverse Interoperability</a> appeared first on <a href="https://metaverse-standards.org">Metaverse Standards Forum</a>.</p>
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