Intellectual Property Ontario aims to make more of discoveries made in province

Ceci est un extrait. Lire l'article complet dans le lien ci-dessous.

By Murad Hemmadi

30 mai 2023

Sadegh Raeisi thinks he has a way to shorten the long times that patients must wait for—and in—medical-imaging machines. Foqus, his Toronto-headquartered startup, uses quantum and machine-learning algorithms to hasten scans. “We are able to make MRI faster because of our technologies,” Raeisi says. “If we cannot protect that secret sauce, we don’t have a business.”

To safeguard that proprietary recipe, Foqus is enrolled in the first cohort of a program run by Intellectual Property Ontario (IPON), a new agency set up to help commercialize more of the innovations made in the province. 

Innovation economy executives and economists have long argued that…

En savoir plus dans The Logic. (mur payant)

Previous
Previous

Les candidatures sont maintenant ouvertes pour les programmes de PI élargis

Next
Next

Conestoga receives funding from Intellectual Property Ontario