Freedom to operate
Whether a company can commercialize without infringing others' patents, a sharper risk in quantum given dense portfolios held by large incumbents.
Freedom to operate is the ability to make, use and sell a product without infringing the valid intellectual-property rights of others. It is distinct from owning IP: a company can hold a strong patent on its own invention and still infringe a third party’s patent on a technique it must use to ship. FTO is assessed by searching the relevant patent landscape for claims that read on the intended product, then clearing them by designing around, licensing, or forming a view that the claims are invalid or do not apply.
In quantum the risk is elevated because the patent landscape is both dense and foundational. Large incumbents and research institutions have spent two decades filing across qubit modalities, control methods, error correction and fabrication, so a startup’s core approach may sit close to, or squarely within, existing claims. The danger is asymmetric: the time to discover an infringement problem is before scaling, not after a product is in market and an incumbent has both the patent and the lawyers.
For an investor, FTO is a specific diligence line, not a footnote to “we have patents”. The questions: has a freedom-to-operate analysis been done, by competent counsel, and what did it surface; are the blocking patents licensed, designed around, or genuinely absent; and how exposed is the company to the big portfolio holders in its modality. A clean, documented FTO position is a real asset in deep tech; its absence is a latent liability that can surface at the worst possible moment, typically when the company is finally large enough to be worth suing.
Quantum has unusually dense patent thickets: IBM, Google, large labs and universities hold thousands of foundational patents, so a brilliant device can still be unsellable if a core technique is someone else's claim. A diligence reader treats FTO as separate from "do we own our IP" (you can own your patents and still infringe a third party's), and weighs whether an FTO analysis exists, what it found, and whether key techniques are licensed or designed around.
From definition to decision
Model this in your own round, scenarios, dilution and runway, in the founder workspace.