First of all, I agree with Mr. Balsillie that we need to do a much better job of IP protection in Canada. A lot of the problem with the post-secondary system is that the handling of IP is very fragmented. I listened in on the previous panel, and Jesse talked about that.
Universities all have different IP policies. They are all responsible for developing and protecting IP, but they often have little expertise and there's no financial support. They do it off the sides of their desks, and that is typically how multinationals come in to take the IP, because they're willing to pay the cost of developing the IP.
I would absolutely agree with having better coordination and the better policies and laws that Mr. Balsillie referred to. We need to take seriously that universities are great at generating IP and talent. There's no question about that. However, it's the follow-on of protecting IP that we fail at. A lot of that is about the scale of most of the generators of IP, the lack of expertise and the lack of support. We need better central support and coordination of IP protection.
