Lexpert Special Editions

Lexpert Special Edition on Technology

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

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2 www.lexpert.ca Editorial fortuna favet fortibus ISSUE 22.01 > FEBRUARY EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Tim Wilbur SENIOR EDITOR Elizabeth Raymer EDITOR Zena Olijnyk NEWS EDITOR Aidan Macnab PRODUCTION EDITOR Patricia Cancilla WRITER Bernise Carolino DESIGNER Ace Dequina PRESIDENT Tim Duce VP, MEDIA & CLIENT STRATEGY Dane Taylor SENIOR BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER Steffanie Munroe BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER Lynda Fenton NATIONAL ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Abhiram Prabhu CUSTOMER SUCCESS MANAGER Amie Suttie amie.suttie@keymedia.com Lexpert Special Edition Magazine is published six times a year. KEY MEDIA and the KEY MEDIA logo are trademarks of Key Media IP Limited, and used under licence by Key Media Canada (Law) Ltd. LEXPERT is a trademark of Key Media Canada (Law) Ltd. Key Media Canada (Law) Ltd 20 Duncan St. 3rd Floor, Toronto, ON M5H 3G8 Tel: (416) 609-8000 Fax: (416) 609-5840 Website: www.lexpert.ca All rights reserved. Contents may not be reprinted without written permission. Lexpert® Magazine is printed in Canada. PUBLICATION MAIL REGISTRATION NO. 41261516. ISSN1488-6553 Copyright© Key Media Canada (Law) Ltd All rights reserved. GST/HST#: 79989 8465 RC-0001 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR tim.wilbur@keymedia.com SUBSCRIPTIONS/ADDRESS CHANGES Contact: Donnabel Reyes at (647) 374-4536 ext. 243 or email donnabel.reyes@keymedia.com. Annual subscription costs C$175. To change your subscription address, please send your new address along with a copy of your mailing label(s) to the Subscription Dept., at the address indicated above. For all other circulation inquiries, please email Donnabel Reyes. T echnology is everywhere these days, from our kitchen table Zoom calls to the peak of the stock markets. COVID has forced the world to shi to virtual communications and fast track medical products and services that rely on complex technologies. Tech IPOs are on fire and the stock price for companies such as Shopify are shooting past blue-chip banks. Perry Dellelce of Wildeboer Dellelce LLP lived through the tech bubble years of the 1990s and says this time it is different (p. 10). Most companies being financed now have substantive business plans and operations, Dellelce says. But there are still big challenges for Canadian tech. ere has been less U.S. venture investment in Canada since the pandemic, Jamie Firsten of Goodmans LLP says (p. 4), because the U.S. venture capitalists can't travel to meet with founders. The pandemic has also created problems in admitting foreign workers, with the Canada Border Services Agency preventing workers from entering the country even with visas (p. 22). Many Canadian tech companies are also finding it difficult to scale to the level of the big tech, which is oen due to a lack of intellectual property protection, says Roch Ripley of Gowling WLG (p. 21). "You look at our GDP per capita and our productivity relative to the Americans, and it's not trending in the right direction. And I think, to a very large degree, it's because we don't do a good job of commercializing intellectual assets, which is really the asset of the 21st century." And perhaps most significantly for the long term, Canada has just introduced a radical overhaul of its privacy regime. While part of the impetus for this legislation is for Canadian companies to compete in an increasingly global world, says Laila Paszti of Norton Rose Fulbright LLP (p. 17), "it will negatively impact companies . . . because they will have to grapple with how this will affect their processing of personal information and how it will require them to retool their data platforms." But tech entrepreneurs, and the legal experts who advise them, are accustomed to change. COVID and new legal regimes are just the latest challenges in their ascendency that shows no sign of stopping. Tim Wilbur, Editor-in-Chief The meteoric ascendance (and challenges) of tech

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