External technological dependency
Closed stacks, critical licences or vendors outside the European Union can limit autonomy, continuity and integration.

Publish, govern and certify critical 3D data with technology developed in Spain, open source integration and lower dependency on non-European vendors.
Built for scenarios where technological control, traceability and data sovereignty matter.
We review your use case, data requirements, access flows and integration with existing systems.
Critical data
LiDAR · BIM · GIS · Orthophotos · 3D Tiles · 360
Obliquo
Operational control
The problem
In defense, security and critical infrastructure, geospatial data are not simple deliverables. They underpin planning, analysis, maintenance, operational response and decision-making.
What happens if your critical data depends on platforms, services or vendors outside your control framework?
Closed stacks, critical licences or vendors outside the European Union can limit autonomy, continuity and integration.
Point clouds, BIM, GIS, orthophotos and 3D models end up split across tools, folders and separate portals.
Internal teams, contractors, integrators and third parties need to view data without losing control over permissions and versions.
When data matters, it also matters who generated it, when it changed and whether it retains integrity.
What Obliquo delivers
Obliquo connects web publishing, data governance, 2D/3D visualization, APIs and certification on a platform developed in Spain and integrable with open source technologies.
Platform developed from Spain to reduce dependency on non-European vendors in critical geospatial workflows.
Designed to integrate with open technologies and existing stacks, avoiding rigid closed architectures.
Permissions, private spaces, controlled publishing and web access for internal and external teams.
With Obliquo Certify, relevant datasets and events can be linked to cryptographic fingerprints and verifiable evidence.
Before and after
Before
With Obliquo
3D data scattered across desktop software.
Web layer to publish 2D/3D data.
Custom portals that are hard to maintain.
Browser access for authorized teams.
Dependency on closed platforms or external vendors.
Spanish stack with open source integration.
Manually managed access.
Controlled permissions and distribution.
Versions and deliveries without clear traceability.
Traceability of datasets, deliveries and versions.
Difficulty sharing without over-exposing data.
Certification option with Obliquo Certify.
Capabilities
Point clouds, meshes, BIM, GIS, orthophotos, 3D Tiles and territorial data accessible from the web.
Private spaces, project permissions and controlled distribution for internal, external or mixed teams.
Integration with geospatial formats, APIs and open source technologies to avoid unnecessary lock-in.
With Obliquo Reality, SLAM, LiDAR and 360 can become shareable web deliverables.
With Obliquo Certify, critical events and datasets can be linked to manifests, hashes and timestamps.
With Obliquo City, urban 3D models and territorial data can support planning, analysis and digital twins.
Use cases
Publishing and governing 3D data for facilities, networks, linear assets, energy, water, transport or telecoms.
Urban models, orthophotos, GIS layers, LiDAR data and digital twins in controlled web environments.
3D and territorial data for coordination, zone analysis, operational response and post-event review.
State comparison, periodic captures, construction or infrastructure monitoring and evolution analysis.
Integrable 3D geospatial base to build sector solutions without relying on closed stacks.
Dataset or delivery certification when integrity, date, origin or version may be relevant.
Architecture
This is not about replacing your entire stack. It is about adding a governed web layer so critical data can be used without losing control.
Existing data
Enterprise storage · GIS · BIM/IFC · LiDAR/SLAM · Orthophotos · 3D Tiles · Urban models
Obliquo
Authorized users
Technological sovereignty
Obliquo combines Spanish technology development, open source integration and enterprise orientation to reduce lock-in, ease integration and maintain greater control over critical geospatial flows.
Each deployment must be assessed against specific technical, organizational and regulatory requirements.
Core message
Obliquo does more than publish 3D data. It helps maintain technological control over critical geospatial data.
We review with you what data, users, permissions, integrations and operational requirements should be considered to use Obliquo as a geospatial web layer.
Includes
No commitment. We do not promise generic compliance: we analyse your specific case.
FAQ
Technological sovereignty, integration, deployment and sensitive data — with prudent wording.
Yes. The Obliquo platform is developed from Spain and integrates open source technologies when they add control, interoperability and reduced dependency.
It helps reduce external technological dependency by offering a platform developed in Spain, integrable with open technologies and adaptable to your geospatial workflows.
Not necessarily. Obliquo can act as a web layer between your existing data and authorized users, integrating with GIS, BIM, storage and APIs.
Each case must be assessed technically. The platform is oriented to scenarios where access control, integration, traceability and data governance matter.
It should not be assumed without specific evaluation. Obliquo can analyse architecture, permissions, deployment and integration requirements, but compatibility with classified information must not be claimed without formal validation.
Point clouds, LiDAR, SLAM, BIM/IFC, GIS, orthophotos, 3D Tiles, urban models, meshes, 360 and other geospatial assets.
Certify links relevant datasets or events to cryptographic fingerprints, manifests and timestamps to help verify integrity, origin and changes.
No. Obliquo is designed to integrate with open source technologies, geospatial formats and existing systems, reducing unnecessary lock-in.