Let's put it this way. If the investigator ultimately develops the IP and is under an obligation to report it to the university, that's true whether the investigator owns the IP or the university owns the IP. If you don't want to report that, even though nominally the university owns it, it's not going anywhere. So, it doesn't really matter, in my view, who owns it. It's a question of creating the milieu so that people want to disclose, they do disclose, and the university provides the mechanism to allow them to run with it. In some universities, that works better than in others. I'm sure you heard, and Dr. Dixon told you, that at Waterloo there's a very liberal regime. They encourage individuals to work with companies. They put no restrictions on that ability to work with companies to patent or copyright, and to use that data. At other universities, it's not a priority.
It's getting them there that I think is the bigger issue.