It's on a project-by-project basis. From the intellectual property side, I think Steve mentioned the flexibility we have, whereas in the United States it's all institution owned, IP mandated by Bayh-Dole and by federal funding that supports university research.
The tri-council doesn't mandate IP ownership to any one party here in Canada. The institutions are free to choose whether they are more comfortable with inventor owned. Waterloo is the extreme there with inventor owned with no obligation to report. The University of Calgary is inventor owned with an obligation to report and to share revenue. We also have institution owned. So, in some ways, the IP policy can fit the research enterprise at a particular institution, and that's an advantage in Canada.