Photonic Inc. Secures Firgun Ventures Investment and Demonstrates World-First Quantum Teleportation - Quantum Computing Report

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Photonic Inc.
Secures Firgun Ventures Investment and Demonstrates World-First Quantum Teleportation Photonic Inc. (Vancouver, Canada) has reached two major milestones: securing a strategic investment from the newly launched Firgun Ventures and successfully demonstrating a world-first quantum teleportation over 30 km of commercial fiber-optic infrastructure. These developments follow Photonic’s $130M USD ($180M CAD) Series C round in early 2026 and solidify its “Entanglement First” architecture as a primary contender for utility-scale quantum networking. The investment marks the first deployment from Firgun Ventures, a London-based $250 million specialist fund dedicated to Series A/B quantum scale-ups. Founded by Dr. Kris Naudts and Zeynep Koruturk—both early angel investors in Cambridge Quantum (now Quantinuum)—Firgun focuses on bridging the gap between research-stage breakthroughs and commercial viability. The fund is notably anchored by the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA). Photonic was selected for its credible path to fault-tolerant systems, a status reinforced by its participation in DARPA’s competitive quantum benchmarking programs. In a technical breakthrough with telecom giant TELUS, Photonic demonstrated quantum teleportation over 30 km of active metropolitan fiber (TELUS’ PureFibre network). Unlike previous experiments that teleported “disappearing ink”—photonic qubits that could be measured but not further utilized—this demonstration successfully transferred quantum information into a matter-based quantum processor (silicon spin qubits) at a remote node. This “permanent ink” capability means the teleported information was stored and remains available for further computation, a prerequisite for distributed quantum computing. The success of this trial validates Photonic’s unique Entanglement First™ approach, which utilizes silicon T-centre qubits to emit spin-entangled photons at native telecom wavelengths (1550 nm). This eliminates the need for lossy frequency conversion, allowing for seamless integration with existing global telecom infrastructure. By leveraging Quantum Low-Density Parity Check (QLDPC) codes—specifically Photonic’s proprietary SHYPS family—the architecture aims to achieve fault-tolerant operation with significantly fewer physical qubits than traditional surface code models. Explore the technical details of the TELUS teleportation demonstration here, and refer to our previous coverage of Photonic’s $130M funding round here. February 13, 2026 Mohamed Abdel-Kareem2026-02-13T16:38:52-08:00 Leave A Comment Cancel replyComment Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
