Here you can enhance any Linked Open Data resource by providing geospatial descriptors. This does not affect the original resource nor does it notify the resource owner. You are able to attribute your data to yourself and will have the option to download your data object as JSON or save it directly into RERUM for a URI to that JSON.
This application is proud to support the IIIF Presentation API and encourages you to bring your own IIIF resources. If your web resource fits this category, there are two main paths to take.
The IIIF Presentation API is extendable and benefits from its active community through community driven extensions. The IIIF Maps groups developed a foundation around GeoJSON-LD and designed ways to use this data format within the IIIF APIs and data schemas. The navPlace Extension formally introduced a navPlace property which is designed to house a single GeoJSON Feature Collection thus making a formal and direct connection between the resource and place. This path will result in a formatted navPlace JSON object which can be used with your resource.
The IIIF Presentation API incorporates the W3C Web Annotation for the "Annotation" objects created under its schema. These Annotations can be embedded directly onto IIIF Defined Types. It can also target those data types as non-destructive, non-dispruptive independent data assertion. This path seeks to finish with a real active LOUD Geolocating Web Annotation for the resource you provide.
Linked Open Usable Data is a vast expanse of different data classifications with well described taxonomies and ontologies. If your URI resolves to JSON, preferably JSON-LD (what's the difference?), then you can provide GeoJSON-LD for that LOUD entity through using a W3C Web Annotation. This path seeks to finish with a real active LOUD Geolocating Web Annotation for the resource you provide.