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RTechnology Review - Published By MITussia is finalizing plans to launch a Silicon Valley-like "innovation center" near Moscow. The Kremlin has selected a patch of farmland near a private business school, has set aside funding, and this week named a Nobel laureate, the physicist Zhores Alferov, as the project's science advisor. Now comes the hard part: making it work.

Venture capital: Eugene Kaspersky, CEO of Kaspersky Lab (left) and President Dmitry Medvedev (right) met last year at the launch of a new Russian commission to promote technology development in the country. Medvedev recently announced plans to build a Silicon Valley-like innovation center outside Moscow. Credit: Kaspersky Lab This means deciding what kind of operating and funding model to pursue, and making sure Russia's legal and financial structures will support entrepreneurship. "There certainly isn't any shortage of really bright technical people with great technological ideas in Russia, and that's a strong suit," says Josh Lerner, a professor of investment banking at Harvard Business School. "But the big thing has to be: 'What are the barriers to being an entrepreneur and how can we address them?' The entrepreneurial environment represents somewhat of a challenge."

In particular, Russia will need to prove that inventors can secure intellectual property and protect it in the courts, and that investors won't face onerous taxes or other restrictions in financing new ventures. "I think all those areas represent challenges to them," Lerner adds. "My guess is that litigating intellectual property will be challenging."

To read the full, original article click on this link: Technology Review: Can the Kremlin's Silicon Valley Succeed?

Author: David Talbot