As a twelve-year-old-child, Alonsoperez invented a monitoring system to track the behavior of cattle, which could be used to prevent a repeat disaster of the 2001
Foot-and-mouth disease outbreak. Eleven years later, while working as a teaching associate the International Space University, she heard of the
International Telecommunication Union's Young Innovators Competition. Alonsoperez developed her idea into a product called Chipsafer, sent it to the competition, and won. In 2013, Alonsoperez won the Best Young Inventor Award from the
World Intellectual Property Organization. In 2014, the
Inter-American Development Bank named Chipsafer the Most Innovative Startup of Latin America and the Caribbean, and the
MIT Technology Review selected her as the Innovator of the Year for Argentina and Uruguay. One of the benefits of winning the competition was a course in entrepreneurship, where Alonsoperez learned how to set up a development company and create a prototype. She founded IEETech and with seed money from the Uruguayan National Research and Innovation Agency, Alonsoperez developed the prototype, tested it and moved into commercializing Chipsafer. Once the prototype was created, Alonsoperez began to search for investors to buy the device for broad scale testing. The device is a type of solar-powered collar which sends data to IEETech's servers which then analyze the data to detect anomalies. Servers can modify the information received or update function remotely, and cattle owners can modify data and desired output for customized reports. after an initial product consultation in China proved difficult. ==References==