April 16 2026 – Milan, Italy
A Cuiogeo date exclusive isn't without risks. Be aware of:
Abstract This paper introduces "Cuiogeo," a conceptual framework for geospatial data systems that enforce date-exclusive constraints—mechanisms ensuring that spatial data, queries, and derived analyses apply only to specific, non-overlapping temporal intervals. We define the problem space, present an architecture supporting date-exclusive operations, formalize temporal semantics, propose algorithms for indexing and querying, evaluate trade-offs, and discuss applications and future work.
"Curated" is often used in the context of exclusive dating services (where matches are hand-picked).
Data is the "new oil," yet consumers rarely see the dividends. If geolocation data is treated as an exclusive asset, a market could emerge where corporations "lease" the rights to real-time exclusivity. This shifts the model from surveillance capitalism to a consensual rental model, empowering the data subject.
Introduction Cuiogeo addresses scenarios where spatial datasets must be strictly partitioned by time such that records or operations tied to one date (or date range) are considered mutually exclusive from others. Use cases include legal time-bounded rights to land parcels, exclusive temporal licenses for geofenced services, forensic reconstruction with immutable daily snapshots, and data markets that sell per-date access.