... What fees weird to me is OR kicking in when the object is not impacted at all....
I think SK (again, sorry MC for conflating the two of you) our core philosophical disagreement lies right there.
In prior editions..... sigh it's so bad to have to even say that in a rules discussion.... there were subjects and targets. The TARGET of Invisibility is the one who's hard to see. The SUBJECTS are everyone who looks at the target. Now, what was both true then and still true now is "invisibility" is technically speaking a misnomer. You are never actually invisibile.* This is demonstrable, because if you resist the illusion then you can see the "invisible" person. This is obviously true in the way mana illusions work (it tricks your mind into ignoring the target) but, mechanically, this is also true for the physical Improved Invisibility. If one drone can see the invisible ninja and the other cannot, then logically the ninja is not TRULY invisible. It's just some magic that's somehow tricking the 2nd drone but not the first once. Under older paradigms, the drones are subjects and as such are being affected by magic, and therefore entitled to Object Resistance.
So... going back quite a few posts to my bemoaning 6e's lack of rules about spell targeting... THIS. This is exactly the sort of problem its absence has wrought.
*= since we're well down into the weeds, how about some different pedantry for "fun":
1) Invisibility never specifies that it affects your gear at all. Whether it's something you were wearing at the time, or anything you pick up afterwards. Frankly, if you look at the fluff-theory behind spells, it's actually a pretty strong argument that your gear is NOT part of your aura and therefore not affected by the spell. Cyberware? Sure, since you paid essence for it it's a part of you, as far as spells are concerned. But your clothes? Never heard of paying essence for clothes.
1a) of course, either way, surely you can cast Improved Invisibility specifically ON someone's clothing. I'm sure that's a prank that's happened more than once at MIT&T.
2) Doesn't say whether you're invisible to yourself. Can be potentially problematic for fine motor control actions, like picking a lock.
3) Doesn't say whether objects you insert into yourself after becoming invisible remain visible. Food you eat? Contraband you hide in your *ahem* smuggling compartment?
4) Doesn't say you are not blind. Because if you're invisible, the light is passing through you unimpeded and therefore not impacting the receptors in your eyes. But, luckily, you're NOT truly invisible, so this is just a theoretical "what if you WERE, though?"