
Silicon Valley-based firm Deepinvent, which specializes in superintelligence, recently wrapped up its first-ever Deepinvent4Good Inventathon, which took place entirely online from August 7th to August 21st, 2025. Using the AI-powered Deepinvent.ai platform, more than 300 submissions from creative people spanning 10 different nations and 14 diverse industries were collected during this virtual event.
To quickly transform their concepts into possible, possibly patentable inventions. Anastasiia Nosova, Chief Executive Officer of Cyrillic, Giselli Panontini (Vice President at Microsoft in charge Copilot for Office 365), Co-author of the book Blitzscaling, Chris Yeh, and Bhavin Modi, an engineer at OpenAI with prior expertise on the Oculus VR operating system, evaluated the Entries derived from five weighted factors: impact (35%), innovation and reach (25%), social proof (15%), user-informed design (15%), and technical execution (10%).
Winners were announced on August 27, 2025:
First place went to Laura Brown from the United States for her inventive work titled “Integrated Roadway Animal Presence and Deterrence System with V2X Communication.” To greatly reduce animal-vehicle collisions, therefore conserving both human lives and wildlife, this system uses vehicle-to-everything (V2X) technology to find and ward away wildlife along migratory routes.
Alessandro De Angelis of Germany won second prize for his project “KUMA: Real-Time Quantum-Inspired Emotional State Encoding and Adaptive Sound Synthesis System.” Customized therapeutic soundscapes that encourage mental health, improve concentration, and assist in neuro-rehabilitation are created by KÚMA using biometric signals, including heart-rate variability and EEG.
Brian Cliette of the United States took third place for his project “Hybrid Dual-Functional Magnetic-Electro Filter Cartridge with Smart Sensing, Adaptive Regeneration, and Integrated High-Efficiency PFAS/Microplastic Waste Management.”
The Deepinvent4Good helps to reduce obstacles to entry and speed the development of research. Inventathon showed how artificial intelligence may level the path of invention, enabling innovators from all around to find answers for some of the most pressing problems facing humanity.