Company: ARAI
Filing Date: 2025-07-15
Form Type: S-1/A
Source: 0001641172-25-019572
Chunk: 83

Company: Arrive AI Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-07-15
Form: S-1/A
Chunk 83
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 the latter provided up through the termination date. A copy
of the Design Engineering Services Agreement is filed as Exhibit 10.3.

On October 20, 2021, we entered into a Memorandum
of Understanding with Helium Systems Inc. (“Helium”), outlining a commercial partnership to integrate Helium’s LoRaWAN
network into our smart receptacles for improved connectivity and monitoring. We agreed to deploy Helium network coverage and sensors
in our receptacles, beginning with a pilot deployment in Indianapolis, IN. The agreement provides for ongoing technical collaboration,
post-deployment support, and potential expansion to additional locations. Either party may purchase additional services at its discretion.
We agreed to pay Helium all data credit fees at a rate of $0.00001 per 24-byte payload. A copy of the Memorandum of Understanding with
Helium is filed as Exhibit 10.4.

These agreements align with the Company’s
strategic objective of enhancing its smart receptacle ecosystem, expanding network connectivity, and integrating drone-based delivery
services. By partnering with Helium for IoT connectivity and HUSH for drone integration, we strengthen our position in the last-mile
delivery industry, fostering innovation, operational efficiency, and market expansion.

Intellectual Property

Arrive AI’s innovation leadership began
under our former name Dronedek Inc, which secured the first utility patent for smart, secure, climate-controlled drone and robotic package
delivery, storage, and pickup.

New and improved technology is needed to support
the emerging market for the automated exchange of packages and goods. These exchanges between people, robots, and drones are happening
in the autonomous last mile (“ALM”). Our original intellectual property position included four foundational patents by Dan
O’Toole which focused on drone deliveries of packages to a smart and secure arrival point. These original patents contained many
expansion features, temperature assist, battery exchanges, and various controls which allowed the smart mailbox receptacle devices to
receive the data streams and logistics from both residential and commercial customers. Additional development efforts as well as acquisitions
extended and expanded the features. The technology extended to multiple sources for the sending and receiving of packages in a safe,
secure manner. That effort broadened quickly to include receipt and package exchanges with automated delivery robots and traditional
companies with courier driver focused deliveries. These additional business acquisitions and technology developments focused on receiving
multiple packages and multiple users. These foundational patents as well as the newly acquired technology consisted of features for tracking
packages as well as for collecting data