Click to expand
- Introduction
- Grants
Awesome Foundation
Cisco Research Grants
Chan Zuckerberg Initiative
Comcast Innovation Fund
DIIF - Digital Infrastructure Grants @ Open collective
Gitcoin Grants Program
Google Open Source CMS Fund @ Open collective
InnovationsFonden
🇩🇰Internet Freedom Support Fund @ Open collective
Kusama
Libre Endowment Fund
Matthew Good Foundation
Metamask Grants
Netidee
🇦🇹NGI - NLNet Foundation
Open Defense Fund
Open Humans
Open Society Foundation
Open Technology Fund
Open Source Collective (OSC)
Polkadot Treasury Fund
Protocol Labs Research
Protocol Labs Sponsorships
Prototype Fund
🇩🇪Python Software Foundation
RIPE NCC Community Projects Fund
Roddenberry Catalyst
Samsung Next
Siegel Family Endowment
SIDN Fonds
🇳🇱Shuttleworth Foundation
Sloan Foundation
Sovereign Tech Fund
Sovereign Tech Fund - Maintainer Fellowships
Swedish Internet Foundation
🇸🇪Unreal Engine Megagrants
Top10vpn Research Grant
Vinnova
🇸🇪Web3 Foundation Grants
- Currently Not Applicable
Outreachy
Facebook Research Grants
Sage Concept Grants
Internet Society Foundation
Interledger Ambassador Program
Isif Asia
Fire Africa
Lacnic Frida
Beta Nsf Gov
Google Summer of Code
Google Grants
Coding It Forward
Google Season of Docs
Knight Foundation
Seedfund NSF
Software Sustainability Institute
Horizon Europe Guarantee
Internet Society
CISCO Grant Program
Google Research Outreach Program
UK Innovation competition list
BBSw Fellowship Program
Mozilla Technology Fund (MTF)
QGIS
Rubycentral
Wikimedia Grants
Amateuer Radio Digital Communications
- Grants - Listings
- Notable Projects
- Time-bounded Opportunities
- Other Organisations
- Crowdfunding
- Links
- License
More individuals, organizations and companies are starting to realize the potential of open source. An important question is obviously how projects can be funded to enable individuals to subsist and work on open source full time. This document aims to be an open guide to funding of open source projects.
A list of funding opportunities that follow the grants model. This type of funding is usually carried out in batches, i.e. the fund in question release a certain amount of money each year and it's spread out over multiple projects. Grant funding often allows you to plan and execute projects over a longer period of time.
Have a crazy brilliant idea that needs funding? We award 1,000 USD grants every month. It couldn't be simpler! Your idea is yours alone. We don't want a stake in it. We just want to help you make it happen!
Each fully autonomous chapter supports awesome projects through micro-grants, usually given out monthly. These micro-grants, 1000 USD or the local equivalent, come out of pockets of the chapter's "trustees" and are given on a no-strings-attached basis to people and groups working on awesome projects. Every chapter interprets "awesome" for itself. As such, awesome projects include initiatives in a wide range of areas including arts, technology, community development, and more. Many awesome projects are novel or experimental, and evoke surprise and delight. Awesome sometimes challenges and often inspires.
https://www.awesomefoundation.org/en/submissions/new
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The goal of this RFP is to solicit proposals that aim to conduct research in information and communications technologies (ICTs) and their application towards more sustainable outcomes. Specific areas of research include but are not limited to the following:
Sustainable data, computing and communications architectures and infrastructures: datacenters, clouds and edge as well as novel network designs Sustainable and energy-efficient systems: computing, communications, networking, storage, etc. The application of AI/ML to enable improved sustainability outcomes Design for sustainability - software design and operations paradigms taking 'sustainability-first' approach Energy and sustainability profiling and monitoring techniques Novel approaches to enable information exchange for product lifecycle management and circularity Security considerations for distributed infrastructures and systems such as energy generation and distribution Business models and information systems for sustainability and circularity Human factors in design of improved product sustainability
The goal of this RFP is to solicit proposals that aim to conduct research and address research challenges in the technologies and applications in the area of Web 3.0, Blockchain, cryptocurrencies aka virtual-currencies. Specific areas of research include but are not limited to the following:
Blockchain platforms, protocols, cross-chain protocols, consensus, smart contracts, de-centralization Networking, Compute, Edge, Cloud Infrastructure for Web 3.0: Blockchain De-centralized Apps (dApps) De-centralized Finance (DeFi) Trust, Security & Privacy: Security for de-centralized system and applications, privacy-preserving protocols Trust, Fairness: fairness in DeFi, Consensus Compliance: Regulatory compliance for blockchain, DeFi, dApps Applications of Web 3.0: DAO, NFTs
University researchers only
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Open source software is crucial to modern scientific research, advancing biology and medicine while providing reproducibility and transparency. Yet even the most widely-used research software often lacks dedicated funding. CZI’s Essential Open Source Software for Science program supports software maintenance, growth, development, and community engagement for critical open source tools.
We welcome applications from any country, provided the proposed work is compliant with the United States Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) sanctions program. Applications may be submitted by non-profit and for-profit organizations, public and private institutions, such as colleges, universities, hospitals, laboratories, units of state and local government, companies, and eligible agencies of the federal government. As part of the full application process, for-profit organizations may need to provide additional information on the charitable purposes of the proposal. Grants are not permitted to individuals; only to organizations. Open source software projects operating independently must be affiliated with an organization, as described below.
https://chanzuckerberg.com/rfa/essential-open-source-software-for-science/
Cycle 6 closed in October 2023.
The Comcast Innovation Fund was created to support technology and public policy research that contributes to the betterment of the Internet, and the continued evolution of connectivity products and services. The fund provides grants to technologists, researchers, and academics to support Internet- and connectivity-focused projects within the fund’s areas of interest, which are updated annually. The Comcast Innovation Fund offers funding for researchers at leading academic institutions and elsewhere to support research that is of mutual interest to Comcast and the research community. It also provides funding to support open source software development. While Comcast has supported this kind of work for many years, we are now doing so in a more strategic way. Areas out of scope for the 2023 Grant Year include:
- Fintech, NFTs, blockchain, crypto currencies
- Projects which focus on network simulators
- New social media systems
- Quantum computing
2023 AREAS OF INTEREST
- Areas of focus for the Comcast Innovation Fund are updated annually. Projects most likely to receive Innovation Fund Grants will fall into one of these areas.
- Top Areas of Interest for 2023:
- Understanding the Internet Network through measurement:
- Improving, especially real-time, Internet-wide measurement
- Improved insight into working latency, end user quality of experience, comparative performance between including ISPs, Wireline access to wireless such as 5G home Internet services, WiFi Performance
- Data driven insight into adoption, performance, and network impacts of privacy protecting proxies using the MASQUE protocol and the various new encrypted DNS protocols
- Low Latency Networking – especially related to deployment of AQM and L4S, including measurement of the use of ECT(1) and DSCP 45
- Improving Internet core network protocols, such as secure routing and RPKI, encrypted DNS, and adaptive DNS discovery for applications
- Edge Computing
- Understanding Internet Consolidation & Mechanisms for De-Centralization
- Internet Governance and Policy Analysis – especially focused on common policy issues across countries, economic impacts, and related issues, as well as unlicensed spectrum and shared spectrum
- Broadband Mapping – especially measuring the effectiveness & opportunities for improvement of new FCC maps and novel uses of mapping data
- Rural Broadband – especially assessing the effectiveness and speed of subsidized rural broadband construction using a variety of different access technologies and associated issues of bringing broadband to unserved areas
- CDNs and Video Streaming – especially low-latency live streaming, encoder improvements
- Multi-Path Networking
- IoT consumer labeling
- Privacy and Security automation through both AI/ML and other techniques for:
- Privacy threat modeling for detection & mitigation
- Cybersecurity response and recovery
- Privacy engineering and protection
- Software supply chain security and integrity such as discovering malicious contributions to open-source projects
https://comcastinnovationfund.smartsimple.com/s_Login.jsp
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Everything in our modern society, from hospitals and banks to universities and social media platforms, runs on software. Nearly all of this software is built on “digital infrastructure,” a foundation of free and public code that is designed to solve common challenges. The benefits of digital infrastructure are numerous: it can reduce the cost of setting up new businesses, support data-driven discovery across research disciplines, enable complex technologies such as smartphones to talk to each other, and allow everyone to have access to important innovations like encryption that would otherwise be too expensive. Sharing code to address common challenges is in principle cheaper, easier and more efficient. While the collective action problems that characterize infrastructure funding are well-explored, the industrial organization of digital infrastructure is less well-understood. In 2016, the Ford Foundation funded a report by Nadia Eghbal titled “Roads and Bridges: The Unseen Labor Behind Our Digital Infrastructure” that described how that the development and maintenance of digital infrastructure often falls to communities of volunteers who take it upon themselves to maintain this infrastructure in their own free time and for little or no money. Unsurprisingly, this leads to significant risks to the open internet and the ability to develop new, innovative research and businesses within it.
In order to better understand the incentives and constraints that influence the maintenance of digital infrastructure, in 2018 the Sloan and Ford Foundations funded a portfolio of 13 research projects. In some cases the findings of these projects open up further questions, while in others they suggest interventions that could strengthen community practices.
To continue to advance this agenda, this RFP invited proposals to further study the maintenance of digital infrastructure. This new RFP is being funded again by Ford Foundation and Sloan Foundation as well as Mozilla, Omidyar and Open Society Foundations.
Our 2024 RFP invites new proposals and research implementations to study the production, maintenance, governance and use of open digital infrastructure, looking at, but not limited to, the aspects listed in our Funding Scope.
- Digital infrastructure projects
- Civic tech, environmental justice, globa, online infrastructure, open source, research, social justice
- Research grants for the study of digital infrastructure maintenance.
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The Gitcoin Grants Program is a quarterly initiative run by Gitcoin DAO that empowers everyday believers in web3 to drive funding toward what they believe matters, with the impact of individual donations being magnified by the use of the Quadratic Funding (QF) distribution mechanism. QF was introduced in a paper published in 2018 by Vitalik Buterin, Zoe Hitzig, and Glen Weyl.
Web3 Open Source Software is one of multiple eligible types of projects, in such case the following is required:
- Be an open-source project with meaningful Github activity in the prior 3 months that has demonstrated work completed towards the project’s mission.
- Primarily focused on developing on top of or advancing the broader Ethereum and/or Web3 industry.
April 25th to May 9th.
Support FOSS Sustainability. Google seeks to improve the web for developers and users by supporting open source CMSes.
The Open Source CMS Fund has enabled Google to:
- Fund projects, like lazy loading, that work to improve performance, privacy and security, and support new web platform capabilities in the open source ecosystem.
- Sponsor open source CMS and ecommerce platforms to learn from and support their communities, share best practices and educational content directly with developers and site owners, and to gather product feedback.
https://opencollective.com/google-open-source-cms-fund?ref=blog.opencollective.com
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InnovationsFonden
or Innovation Fund Denmark
invests in both large and small projects and they don't require any stake in the project nor repayment. They have three different programs targeting the whole range from large scale research projects to smaller enterprises and entrepreneurs down to talented individuals within the research space. Funds can be anything between 50k to 5M DKK depending on the size of the project.
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Global internet freedom is more important than ever before. The internet is the primary way we communicate, collaborate, share knowledge and organize. We must therefore ensure it's freedom, openness, accessibility and privacy in order to revert the cycle of misinformation, polarization and the assault on our democracies occurring worldwide.
At the forefront of this work is the Open Technology Fund (OTF), whose mission has been to support open technologies and communities that increase free expression, circumvent censorship, and obstruct repressive surveillance as a way to promote human rights and open societies.
Through several funds and over the years, OTF funded projects focused on counteracting repressive censorship and surveillance, enabling citizens worldwide to exercise their fundamental human rights online. Through the research, development, implementation, and sustainability of technologies that facilitate the free flow of information, increase at-risk users’ digital security, and enable free expression, the OTF community has been working to shape the Internet as a platform that fosters unimpeded connection and collaboration - facilitating positive social progress and reinforcing core democratic values.
Since the loss of government funding, many of these projects have seen their funding halted overnight and as a community we must come together and ensure their ability to continue doing this work. This lack of funding exposes a weakness in the global internet freedom ecosystem which needs to be resolved.
The Internet Freedom Support Fund will provide relief to projects essential to guarantee and increase internet freedom who have been receiving funding from OTF and have recently seen their funding cancelled due to OTF’s loss of government funds.
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The Kusama Treasury is a pot of funds collected through transaction fees, slashing, and staking inefficiencies, that can be spent by submitting a spending proposal that, if approved by the Community, will enter a waiting period before distribution.
Proposals may consist of (but not limited to): Infrastructure deployment and continued operation; Network security operations (monitoring services, continuous auditing); Ecosystem provisions (collaborations with friendly chains); Marketing activities (advertising, paid features, collaborations); Community events and outreach (meetups, hackerspaces); Projects focusing on the relationship between technology and art; Research (academic and non-academic); Software development (wallets and wallet integration, clients and client upgrades).
- https://guide.kusama.network/docs/grants/
- https://kusama.polkassembly.io/discussions
- https://kusama.polkassembly.io/post/610
- https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Hfofao18fZBK2XxLTZaYAougW2-_tB8UVsEUKVQi4n0/edit
- https://docs.google.com/document/d/1p3UQUjph5t8TVaWnTkfrI5mE-BABnM9Xvtuhdlhl6JE/edit?usp=sharing
Anyone building with Substrate and/on Kusama.
Discuss before in the forum and only post proposal if you have enough support, otherwise you may lose the deposit (you pay the deposit when you submit a proposal, if it ed, you get it back) https://www.dotreasury.com/ksm/proposals
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Organisations and institutions wishing to ensure support, maintenance and continuous development of mission critical free software can use FDL and AWL to offset some of the associated cost while also being able to influence the long-term roadmaps of utilised software solutions.
Aside from supporting Free Software solutions, the FDL also aims to increase the visibility of European Free Software publishers and their importance in terms of innovation and employment as well as their contribution to a possible European technological sovereignty. n supporting long term maintenance of essential and mature Free Software as well as short term development of any generic Free Software, FDL sponsorship fits in the gap between public R&D funding and private system integration funding.
In order for a project to be eligible to receive funding for:
Short-term improvements/extensions Long-term maintenance
The following criteria have to be met in addition for long-term maintenance:
The software must be in existence for more than 10 years It is used by companies or institutions and needs to be maintained for at least another 10 years.
The following criteria have to be met:
The software must be Free and Open Source Software (FOSS), with all source code and documentation available online. The software must be generic, meaning it is not specific to the needs of a single organisation. If the software is browser based, it should be compatible with at least two independent web browsers (ex. Firefox and Chrome). If the software is server based, it should be compatible with at least two independent operating systems (ex. GNU/Linux and FreeBSD). If the software is smartphone based, it should be compatible with at least two independent operating systems (ex. Android and iOS). The software must be easily accessible to the general public, meaning it is installable via a single click or a single command line. The software must be easy to contribute to, meaning it's source code can be remotely edited and contributed to through the web. The project must be of general interest (software, documentation, education) which cannot be financed through existing R&D grants in Europe.
https://www.fdl-lef.org/process/
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Every three months, we’ll share £15,000 between 5 shortlisted projects that have a positive impact on communities, people or the environment.
Since 2011, the Matthew Good Foundation has empowered employees of the John Good Group to support many good causes in the UK and around the world by nominating good causes for funding. However, in 2021, our tenth year, we wanted to extend our impact and allow small charities, community projects and social entrepreneurs to come straight to us.
Your application must be on behalf of a local community group, charity, voluntary group or social enterprise that has a positive impact on communities, people or the environment and has an average income of less than £50,000 in the last 12 months.
We want to make it easy for very small charities or new community interest companies to apply, so organisations/groups do not need to be a registered charity, however, you will need to have a bank account in your organisation’s/project’s name such as a community bank account. We are not able to provide funding to personal bank accounts.
https://www.matthewgoodfoundation.org/grantsforgood/
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is an employee-led DAO with the mission of funding the development of high-value projects in the MetaMask ecosystem through a grants program. We seek to support developers across the community to be able to nimbly build on top of the MetaMask ecosystem, while empowering employees to embrace Web3 mechanisms and contribute as “One ConsenSys”.
Any project that adds value to the MetaMask ecosystem is eligible. We are keeping scope wide to consider as many interesting projects as possible. As the DAO evolves, we may choose to focus on specific, high-priority areas at times.
https://metamaskgrants.org/apply-for-a-grant
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Netidee
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Austria
netidee, run by the Private Internet Fund Austria, is meant to fund projects related to the open source internet. In 2020, the maximum amount of funding was 50k EUR for an individual project. An Austria-resident individual or organization has to request the grant. Applications can optionally be sent in English and parts of the project can be outsourced to entities abroad if this is detailed in the initial request.
They don't have the english version, so it might be only for the Austrians, although it doesn't specifically say so.
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2024 deadline passed.
NLNET Zero Entrust
We are seeking project proposals between 5.000 and 50.000 euro's — with the possibility to scale them up if there is proven potential. Reliability, confidentiality, integrity, security and data portability should be the 'new normal' of the internet, something ordinary users should not have to worry about — users should be in control. So let's make it happen. https://hackmd.io/Ak2Y1KZLRL2Ij1M6jP4pgw
The foundation "Stichting NLnet" stimulates network research and development in the domain of Internet technology. The articles of association for the NLnet foundation state: "to promote the exchange of electronic information and all that is related or beneficial to that purpose".
NLnet does not directly benefit from the undertaken projects, and all developments are published as Open Source.
Current submission(s):
Next Generation Search and Discovery
NGI Assure - building blocks for a complete, strong chain of assurances
From OTF mailing list:
NLNet is seeking proposals requesting between €5,000 and €50,000 for projects for Privacy and Trust projects “aimed at providing people with new instruments that allow them more agency - and assist us with fulfilling the human need of keeping some private and confidential context and information private and confidential.” This effort is part of the EU’s Next Generation Initiative (NGI), which seeks to “re-imagine and re-engineer the internet for the third millennium and beyond to shape a value-centric, human and inclusive society for all.”
If the project you are are considering would be a significant advance towards the goals and the vision of the Next Generation Internet, we invite you to submit - even if you live outside of Europe
- Apr 1 2023
- Aug 1 2023
Owned by none, ODF is a consortium of organizations participating in an open forum dedicated to protecting the future of the web. No member speaks for or represents the foundation or any other member in the think tank, all views come from a diverse range of ethnic and cultural heritages. ODF's mission is to facilitate healthy discourse between differing cultures by freely promoting corroborative facts with fair algorithms. If you align with ODF's mission, please write a proposal and submit it as a pull request, and we will route it to an appropriate person for review. This can be for a conference or an art project, to show off a code demo, or anything relevant. Try to at least showcase any past project(s) you are proud of.
Currently, only 1 existing member needs to approve of your pull request and you will then be granted full push permission.
All work must be open source, built in public. If you are a for-profit or blockchain entity, you are expected to commit funds. No future-facing projections are permitted, as such all teams will be continuously subject to ethics disclosures and members are encouraged to constructively criticize each other, especially across replicable engineering standards. Public podcasts of debates and challenges will be promoted, proofs will be prioritized as pragmatic over philosophies alone.
Make a pull request https://github.com/balzack/monorepo/blob/main/how-to-apply-for-funding-or-speak/README.md
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Do you have a project that might help grow the Open Humans ecosystem?
You may qualify for 5000 USD to support your work!
Projects can work with members in a variety of exciting ways – help members add new data sources, or share new ways to explore existing data!
For example...
Share a data report or visualization! Help members import a new type of data Connect to an existing community or study
This is open to both US-based and international individuals. No institutional or organizational affiliation is required.
Individuals and teams are invited to apply for a project grant of up to 5000 USD if they plan to do one or more of the following:
Provide valuable new/novel data sources raise significant awareness of the project attract new members (e.g. by providing an analysis or visualization of data) who will continue to contribute to the ecosystem in the future after your project rolls out.
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdpunOhJosk-u4jr-5BtI9YQaR8zBPFTwX9Q5CLy091m88FdA/viewform
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Building long-term relationships of trust with the entities we support, and understanding their health, effectiveness, strengths, and the challenges they face, is an integral part of the Open Society Foundations’ organization-centered approach to grant making. The vast majority of our grants are awarded to organizations that we approach directly. The kind of grants any Open Society program makes depend on its strategy and its vision of how to use its budget most effectively.
https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/grants/open-society-fellowship?eligibility=1
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As of 2024-09-13 deadline passed for all projects.
The Open Technology Fund supports projects and people that develop open and accessible technologies promoting human rights and open societies, and help advance inclusive and safe access to global communications networks.
- Internet Freedom Fund
- Rapid Reponse Fund
- Information Controls Fellowship
- Surge and Sustain Fund
- Technology at Scale Fund
- https://github.com/OpenTechFund/application-guide
From their webpage:
The Open Technology Fund utilizes available funds to support Internet freedom projects that empower world citizens to have access to modern communication channels that are free of restrictions, and allow them to communicate without fear of repressive censorship or surveillance.
- Internet Freedom Fund projects and people working on open and accessible technology-focused projects that promote human rights, Internet freedom, open societies
- Rapid Reponse Fund aims to resolve threats in a timely and comprehensive manner for individuals, communities, and organizations whose free expression has recently been repressed. To resolve digital emergencies, OTF offers both direct financial support as well as technical services from trusted partners to high-risk people and organizations, such as bloggers, cyber activists, journalists, and human rights defenders
- Information Controls Fellowship supports examination into how governments in countries, regions, or areas of OTF’s core focus are restricting the free flow of information, cutting access to the open Internet, and implementing censorship mechanisms, thereby threatening the ability of global citizens to exercise basic human rights and democracy; work focused on mitigation of such threats is also supported
- Surge and Sustain Fund provides resources to leading VPN and circumvention solutions to support user costs in highly restrictive environments.
- Technology at Scale Fund fund is the primary means through which OTF directly supports the technology needs of USAGM broadcast networks, journalists, and their audiences. Many of these networks serve audiences in countries that attempt to block access to USAGM content and impede journalists’ efforts to report objective news. The Technology at Scale Fund solicits mature technology solutions to ensure that USAGM audiences can access content safely through firewalls and other government attempts to censor objective news and allow journalists to safely do their work and communicate with sources.
https://apply.opentech.fund/internet-freedom-fund-concept-note/
- Internet Freedom Fund (open)
- Rapid Reponse Fund (open)
- Information Controls Fellowship
- Surge and Sustain Fund (open)
- Technology at Scale Fund (open)
- Learning Lab
- Localization Lab
- Read Team Lab
- Secure Usability and Accessibility Lab
The Internet Freedom Fund is OTF's primary way to support projects and people working on open and accessible technology-centric projects that promote human rights, Internet freedom, open societies, and help advance inclusive and safe access to global communications networks. Successful applicants are awarded monetary support up to $900,000 and no less than $10,000, with preference given to projects and people who are new to the Internet freedom community, directly serving those living within repressive environments, and are requesting less than $300,000 for a duration of 12 months or less.
The Rapid Response Fund is part of a broader OTF initiative which aims to facilitate the development of a strong digital emergency response community that can work together to resolve threats in a timely and comprehensive manner. OTF offers both direct financial support as well as technical services from trusted service partners to resolve digital emergencies experienced by high-risk Internet users and organizations, such as bloggers, activists, journalists. and human rights defenders.
For more specific, one-off support needs and services, check out OTF's Labs: Localization, Community, Engineering, Usability, Red Team, Learning, and Legal.
They also fund people by offering fellowships.
Stay focused on your project — let us take care of all the accounting, taxes, invoices, and admin. You decide where the money gets spent, then we make it happen. Plus, your budget will be fully transparent to your community.
- licence (Free Software Foundation License List or Debian Free Software Guidelines or Fedora Software License List or Open Source Hardware Association Statement of Principles)
- at least 100 stars on Github/Gitlab
- at least 50 members
- project must be directly related to open source, not proprietary technology or any other topics
- meetups or small event groups should have organized at least 2 events previously
- conferences and larger events may require specific risk assessment by our board
https://opencollective.com/opensource
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The Polkadot Treasury is a pot of funds collected through transaction fees, slashing, and staking inefficiencies that can be spent by submitting a spending proposal that, if approved, will enter a waiting period before distribution.
Proposals may consist of (but not limited to): Infrastructure deployment and continued operation; Network security operations (monitoring services, continuous auditing); Ecosystem provisions (collaborations with friendly chains); Marketing activities (advertising, paid features, collaborations); Community events and outreach (meetups, hackerspaces); Research (academic and non-academic); Software development (wallets and wallet integration, clients and client upgrades); Cross-chain application development.
- https://wiki.polkadot.network/docs/grants
- https://wiki.polkadot.network/docs/learn-treasury
- https://docs.google.com/document/d/1IZykdp2cyQavcRyZd_dgNj5DcgxgZR6kAqGdcNARu1w/edit
- https://polkadot.network/blog/kusama-treasury-funds-seven-teams-in-seven-weeks
- https://wiki.polkadot.network/docs/learn-treasury#creating-a-treasury-proposal
- https://medium.com/polkadot-network/common-good-parachains-an-introduction-to-governance-allocated-parachain-slots-88e01812160d
Anyone building with Substrate and/on Polkadot.
Discuss before in the forum and only post proposal if you have enough support, otherwise you may lose the deposit (you pay the deposit when you submit a proposal, if it ed, you get it back) https://www.dotreasury.com/dot/proposals
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We are looking for research and development of interactive private communication mechanisms. Commensurate with scope, up to USD 150k per award for research grants and USD 300k per award for implementation grants. Works we are interested in funding include those which:
Explore new mechanisms for private communication (e.g. with cryptographic, information theoretic, or statistical basis) Relax the traditional ‘web’ assumptions of a single origin to engage with the possibilities of pre-distributed CDN or content-addressed data. Prototype the use of novel network-layer privacy technologies in real systems.
Implementation grant We expect that a team of 2-3 research engineers/developers working for 1-2 years will be sufficient to carry out the prototype development projects envisioned in this call, but we will consider other proposals. Renewals are possible.
We encourage you to reach out to research-grants@protocol.ai
or visit #private-retrieval
in the Lodestar Discord if you’re considering applying or have any questions.
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Sponsorships To request sponsorship for research-oriented events, we ask that you fill out our sponsorship request form. Please provide as much information as possible (sponsorship tiers, free non-speaker tickets, branding, a table or other space for swag, inclusion in newsletters, etc.) to minimize the need for back-and-forth communication and help streamline our review process. We ask that all requests are submitted at least two months prior to the date of your event, so we have sufficient time to review the request, make a decision, and finalize logistics. If you have a question about sponsorship that is not covered by the request form, please email research-grants@protocol.ai.
Protocol Labs (PL) Research reviews requests for sponsorship at research-focused events. In addition to financial support, we seek to support these events by providing speakers, sending attendees, and promoting them on our website when appropriate. Note that we do not sponsor pay-to-speak events
https://protocollabs.smapply.io/prog/event_sponsorship/
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The Prototype Fund supports software developers, designers and other creatives in transforming their ideas from a concept to a software prototype. Whether it’s about society, education, environment or tech sovereignty – together we explore and test new ways for technical and social innovations.
As individual developers or small interdisciplinary project teams, you will receive up to €47,500 over six months from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research. With this funding, you can write code and develop a first prototype of your software. We will also connect you with tech and other relevant communities, support you with coaching, and advise you on project implementation, communication, and sustainability.
We explicitly encourage all people who belong to groups that have been underrepresented in software development to apply for the funding. You can contact us at any time during the application period.
From their site:
The Prototype Fund supports ideas in civic tech, data literacy, data security and software infrastructure. We want to provide software developers, hackers, and creatives with the opportunity to code and develop innovative public interest technologies. Self-employed developers and small teams who live in Germany can apply for funding.
You are individual developers or part of a team* (of developers + x). ✓ Your idea is a software project (or at least largely based on software – hardware projects are not eligible). ✓ You are of legal age (18 or older). ✓ You are resident in Germany, self-employed** or freelance and pay your taxes here. ✓
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The next application phase starts on August 1st, 2023.
From their webpage:
The Python Software Foundation welcomes grant proposals for projects related to the development of Python, Python-related technology, educational programs and resources.
Our current focus is on virtual events, virtual sprints, meetup.com fees, and Python diversity/inclusivity efforts. Grants for non-Python specific events will only be considered where there's a clear Python component to the event, and that the grant will only be for the Python component of the event. The PSF does not fund hackathon-style events.
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We require that applications be submitted 6 weeks before the event/project start date
The RIPE NCC has supported a range of projects and innovative ideas over its 25-year history, and we are now formalising these efforts through the RIPE NCC Community Projects Fund. We know there's no shortage of brilliant minds in the Internet technical community working on groundbreaking projects, but securing funding to support these projects can be challenging.
The RIPE NCC will provide €250,000 per year to support projects of value to the operation, resilience and sustainability of the Internet, with a focus on tools and services benefiting the technical community in our service region.
The service region for RIPE NCC
is made up of over 75 countries, which is one of five Regional Internet Registries (RIR). See https://www.ripe.net/about-us/what-we-do/ripe-ncc-service-region for more information.
- projects working ‘for the Good of the Internet’
- justifiable benefit to the Internet, with preference to be given to projects of particular benefit to the RIPE community
https://www.ripe.net/support/cpf/call-for-applications
May 31 2023.
The Catalyst Fund makes grants between 2,500–15,000 USD to anyone, anywhere in the world who has an early-stage idea or project that addresses pressing global challenges.
The Catalyst Fund has been created to source ideas from all corners of the globe. You can be a seasoned social entrepreneur or a first-time changemaker. Eligible candidates for the Catalyst Fund may be individuals, teams of individuals, non-profit organizations, or social enterprises. To be eligible, all applicants must:
Be 18 years of age or older Submit an application in English Include completed responses to all required application questions Agree to all legal terms and conditions of the Catalyst Fund grant program Be able to legally receive grant funding
There are no deadlines. Applications are accepted year-round.
We focus broadly on these technology areas, but invest opportunistically in founders pursuing the imagined and impossible: artificial intelligence, blockchain, fintech, healthtech, infrastructure, mediatech
Samsung Next is committed to driving and fostering innovation globally. This means that we invest in startups, acquire technology, and partner with companies big and small to unlock value across the entire ecosystem and maximize impact.
We believe great talent and ideas exist in all communities. Companies like ours have a responsibility to ensure that all great founders and tech leaders, regardless of background, access, and geography, have the same opportunity to unlock their potential. Knowing that so much of the tech industry is powered by relationships, we found ourselves asking: How do we broaden our networks to ensure that we’re meeting with the companies who are building the most exciting and visionary products, services, and technologies? https://www.samsungnext.com/whats-next/introducing-the-samsung-next-stack-zero-grant/
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https://samsungnext.typeform.com/to/FFh0nIgy?typeform-source=www.samsungnext.com
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We know that philanthropy doesn’t hold all the answers to addressing tough societal challenges. However, we believe that philanthropy is uniquely positioned to ask big questions of our society, and to bring together the right stakeholders to answer those questions. Our inquiry-driven approach to grantmaking is an iterative process of asking questions, systematically interrogating them, and applying our learnings to subsequents rounds of questioning.
Our approach is grounded in the scientific method, and is inspired by our chairman and founder David Siegel’s approach to his life’s work. We ask questions that help us develop an informed hypothesis, support academic and field-work that uncovers evidence, track and interpret outcomes thoughtfully, and apply our findings in order to inform the next phase of inquiry. https://www.siegelendowment.org/our-interest-areas/infrastructure/ https://www.siegelendowment.org/our-interest-areas/learning/
Siegel Family Endowment supports organizations working at the intersections of learning, workforce, and infrastructure.
No application, but an inquiry driven approach.
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SIDN Fonds
🇳🇱
As an independent fund and Algemeen Nut Beogende Instelling ( ANBI ), we support projects that contribute to a strong internet for everyone. We were founded in 2014 at the initiative of SIDN (Stichting Internet Domeinregistratie Nederland) and since the first call in 2015 we have supported more than 300 projects. https://www.sidnfonds.nl/aanvragen/pioniers ttps://www.sidnfonds.nl/excerpt/
From their webpage:
SIDN Fund does not support internationally oriented projects. To qualify for support, a project should have impact on Dutch society.
SIDN Fund stands for ‘a strong internet for all’. We provide financial support to ideas and projects that aim to make the internet stronger or that use the internet in innovative ways. By doing so, SIDN Fund wants to help increase the social impact of the internet in the Netherlands.
Similarly to InnovationsFonden
, SIDN
also funds projects on different levels. Smaller projects - Pioneer projects
- can receive a maximum of 10k EUR and larger projects - Potentials projects
- up to 75k EUR.
You are eligible for our support if your innovative project serves a social interest, has the potential to make an impact on one of our focus areas and can continue to exist after our funding period. Moreover, it is essential that the results of your project are shared, as is the knowledge and experience gained. We take the following general criteria into account when assessing an application. Please note: additional criteria are sometimes set for theme calls.
- Will it be tackled in collaboration with relevant players from the Dutch internet sector? We see that as a plus. This also applies to cooperation with registrars, hosters or internet providers.
Closes: 2023-12-31 23:59.
We fund research and education in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and economics
Open source is much more than a licensing strategy, it is a set of community practices that enable the distributed production and maintenance of software that are not widely adopted in the research enterprise. The Better Software for Science program seeks opportunities to better understand and align best practices in open source with academic research, with a particular eye toward the health and maintenance of digital infrastructural dependencies upon which computational research relies.
Software is not well-integrated into the scholarly communication system; scientific software is often not cited or well-archived, and can require substantial work to reuse. The Better Software for Science program seeks opportunities to elevate software as a first-order research product as well as efforts that aim to improve the linkages between software and other research outputs such as articles, preprints or data.
The work of building and maintaining research software is often undervalued and marginalized in the research enterprise. The Better Software for Science program seeks opportunities to foreground and institutionalize the individuals and communities who are essential to the utility and durability of software in science, with particular attention to the roles of research software engineer, data scientist, and software curator.
Open and cheap hardware has the potential to revolutionize the creation and deployment of sensors and other scientific instruments, expanding access and lowering barriers to innovation in data-driven research methods. Grants in this focus area seek to explore the potential for Foundation support to have an impact on the development of best practices, data standards, and emerging new practitioner communities in open hardware.
The complexity and opacity of AI-driven research methods has raised new questions about the degree to which their results can or should be trusted. Issues examined in this focus area include identifying and mitigating algorithmic bias, the role of training and benchmarking datasets in AI development, how Machine Learning techniques enhance or degrade rigor and reproducibility, and the ways that algorithmic recommendation systems influence trust in knowledge. Grants focus on exploring these issues with an eye toward understanding the potential for Foundation impact.
Health, safety, and travel restrictions imposed in response to the global coronavirus pandemic made co-located scientific activities impossible. From conferences to classrooms to lab work, research communities responded by using new approaches and technology platforms to continue the practice of science. Grants in this focus area explore these innovations, their effects on research outcomes, and their post-pandemic durability, and encourage continued experimentation by research communities in how scientific practice might be effectively mediated by digital platforms and immersive technologies.
Grants in this program sought to partner with research communities to develop tools, standards, practices, and institutions that enable the efficient management and sharing of data and code at every point in the scientific pipeline—from acquisition through analysis to archiving.
- https://sloan.org/
- https://sloan.org/grants/apply
- https://www.softwareheritage.org/2020/05/20/welcoming-sloan-support-to-expand-the-software-heritage-archive/
In selecting projects for funding, the Foundation seeks proposals for original initiatives led by outstanding individuals or teams. We are interested in projects that have a high expected return to society, exhibit a high degree of methodological rigor, and for which funding from the private sector, government, or other foundations is not yet widely available.
The Foundation does not generally make grants to for-profit institutions.
From their webpage:
The Sloan Research Fellowships seek to stimulate fundamental research by early-career scientists and scholars of outstanding promise.
and:
These two-year fellowships are awarded yearly to 126 researchers in recognition of distinguished performance and a unique potential to make substantial contributions to their field. The 2018 Sloan Research Fellows will receive fellowships in the amount of $65,000
There is also a grant program, but individuals are excluded
does not make grants to individuals except through its Books program
Interested grantseekers should send a two-page letter of inquiry to technology@sloan.org. After that follows the real grant proposal process
Letter of Inquiry should include (1 or max 2 pages)
A brief statement (1-2 sentences) about the nature and purpose of the proposed project; A description of the proposed work to be supported; An estimate of the total cost of the project and the amount of this total the proposer would likely seek from the Sloan Foundation; An estimate of the duration of the project; The grantseeker's title and contact information; The names, affiliations, and titles of other key members of the project, if any.
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The Sovereign Tech Fund supports the development, improvement and maintenance of open digital infrastructure. Our goal is to sustainably strengthen the open source ecosystem. We focus on security, resilience, technological diversity, and the people behind the code.
- STF invests in open digital base technologies that are vital to the development of other software or enable digital networking. We invest in projects that benefit and strengthen the open source ecosystem. Examples include libraries for programming languages, package managers, open implementations of communication protocols, administration tools for developers, digital encryption technologies, and more.
- not looking for user-facing applications, such as messaging apps or file storage services
- only support technologies with societal relevance, i.e. technologies from which a broad public benefits or on which particularly vulnerable groups depend. The public interest in these technologies is not measured solely by the number of users, but also by their criticality in particularly important areas of society
- To receive funding from the Sovereign Tech Fund, technologies must be under-supplied or threatened by other circumstances, acute or long-term, such as market consolidation or severe dependencies. The lack of support and resources or technical alternatives places the technologies in a vulnerable state that threatens the existence and sustainability of the project. Applicants must clearly state the extent to which there is underuse or overuse.
https://sovereigntechfund.de/en/applications/
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The Sovereign Tech Fund is piloting a fellowship program to pay open source maintainers, aiming to address structural issues and support open digital infrastructure in the public interest.
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- Submissions open in Q4 2024: https://www.sovereigntechfund.de/programs/fellowship
- Read more: https://www.sovereigntechfund.de/news/introducing-the-fellowship-for-maintainers
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The Swedish Internet Foundation
(Internetstiftelsen
) is a Swedish fund run by Internetstiftelsen i Sverige or IIS, which administer the Swedish .se
TLD. Parts of the earnings from selling .se domains goes to various projects that benefit the development of internet in Sweden and one of them is InternetFonden. Since 2004 the fund has financed 323 projects for a total of 65M SEK (7.7M USD/7.1M EUR/5.2M GBP). Applicants can be companies, organizations or private people as long as they have a Swedish organization number or social security number.
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Epic Games has committed to providing financial grants to creative, noteworthy, and innovative projects built in and around Unreal Engine or projects that enhance the open source 3D graphics ecosystem.
Our average grants range from 5,000 USD to 250,000 USD, with some extraordinary projects receiving up to 500,000 USD Projects selected cover a variety of endeavors from game development, architecture projects, and film production, to educational uses and software tool development. No matter what size grant you receive, you will continue to own your IP and will be free to publish it however you wish.
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PrivacyCo’s funding opportunities provide a platform for researchers and postgraduate students to conduct original research and promote digital rights globally.
PrivacyCo is committed to provide funding for original research that helps advance digital rights globally. We are particularly interested in funding research that uncovers hidden threats to our digital rights through technical research methods.
We will be accepting applications on a rolling basis, with candidates invited to apply for up to 10,000 USD in funding. Approval will be dependent on the quality and originality of the proposed research coupled with its potential to shape and influence digital rights debates.
Researchers and postgraduate students.
To apply, please email samuel@privacy.co a one page concept note outlining your methodology, potential findings and funding requirements.
Open
Vinnova
🇸🇪
Vinnova
is Sweden’s innovation agency. We help to build Sweden's innovation capacity, contributing to sustainable growth. Our vision is that Sweden is an innovative force in a sustainable world.
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As part of our commitment to promoting the Web3 ecosystem, we offer a comprehensive grants program focused on funding software development and research efforts related to Polkadot and Kusama. You don't need to start your own project in order to be eligible for a grant. Instead, some teams choose to port existing work to Substrate, where the pertinent licenses allow, or even to contribute to an existing open-source project. In the latter case, you should check in advance that the maintainers of the project are interested in your contribution, and the acceptance of the milestones will generally be tied to the inclusion of your work in said project. See the Maintenance Grants section for more info.
- https://github.com/w3f/Grants-Program/#wave-introduction
- https://medium.com/web3foundation/web3-foundation-grants-wave-one-winners-2a9cd39f1fbc
- https://medium.com/web3foundation/web3-foundation-grants-wave-two-recipients-16d9b996501d
- https://medium.com/web3foundation/web3-foundation-grants-wave-3-recipients-6426e77f1230
- https://medium.com/web3foundation/wrap-up-for-winter-with-our-wave-four-grant-recipients-52c27b831a6e
Generally, your project will have better chances to be accepted if:
It presents a well-researched or tested concept, for which ideally you are able to show some prior work. You can demonstrate that the project will be maintained after completion of the grant, be it through an obvious commitment to the technology from your side, additional funding sources or an existing business model. Your team has proven experience with the relevant languages and technologies and/or a strong technical background. You will be asked to provide the GitHub profiles of your team members as part of your application, which we will examine for past activity and code quality. Naturally, you can also link to projects on other platforms. Your application is rich in technical details and well-defined. You can clearly present how your project stands out among competitors or implements technology that doesn't exist in the ecosystem yet. Additionally, it must fulfill the following requirements:
All code produced as part of a grant must be open-sourced, and it must also not rely on closed-source software for full functionality. We prefer Apache 2.0, but GPLv3, MIT or Unlicense are also acceptable. We do not award grants for projects that have been the object of a successful token sale. Applications must not mention a specific token. Furthermore, the focus of the application should lie on the software that is being implemented/research being carried out as part of the grant, and less on your project/venture/operation. For the purpose of the application and delivery, think about how others might also benefit from your work. As a general rule, teams are asked to finish a grant before applying for another one. Lastly, we do not fund projects that actively encourage gambling, illicit trade, money laundering or criminal activities in general.
https://github.com/w3f/Grants-Program/#mailbox_with_mail-suggest-a-project
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Outreachy provides internships in open source and open science. Outreachy provides internships to people subject to systemic bias and impacted by underrepresentation in the technical industry where they are living.
"people subject to systemic bias and impacted by underrepresentation in the technical industry where they are living"
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mid August 2024
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"There are no open RFPs at this time. Please check back later." as of 2024-08-30
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SAGE’s Concept Grant program provides funding for innovative software solutions that support research in the social sciences.
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2024 deadline has passed. It is unknown is this grant project will be repeated.
We support the global Internet community – researchers, developers, nonprofits, educators and more – through the following grant programs:
Bolt Program https://www.isocfoundation.org/grant-programme/bolt-grant-program/
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Nothing open at the moment.
6-month project that advances the digital financial inclusion agenda specific to their expertise and networks. This program is ideal for researchers, developers, open-source contributors, entrepreneurs, educators, policy regulators, open standards enthusiasts, digital and financial rights advocates, creators, and artists operating at the intersection of technology and community. All ambassadors will receive a $30,000 grant for research, building, organizing, and advocacy.
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Applications will be accepted via Submittable from June 4th, 2024, 12 am EDT until August 31st, 2024.
The challenges of improving Internet growth are multi faceted and interrelated, particularly in developing countries. They include, for example, access to technical skills and knowledge, the diffusion and reliability of infrastructures and services, an enabling business and policy environment for information and telecommunications, as well as unique local economic and social challenges.
Meeting and overcoming these challenges requires innovative solutions and the involvement of local actors, who are best placed to understand their needs and requirements. Critical to reach these goals are the availability of Internet infrastructure and services that are affordable and efficient; innovative Internet applications; successful and sustainable models for the provision of Internet services and finally, business environments which can become commercially competitive and sustainable.
Support research on Internet operations, infrastructure, technologies and protocols, conducted within the Asia Pacific region. Support implementation and refinement of digital solutions that make strategic use of Internet technologies in an innovative way, responding to the needs and challenges that different communities face. Provide higher visibility and share evidence of the positive influence that the Internet is having in the Asia Pacific region, and in particular the contributions from Asia Pacific digital innovators to these developments. Build the capacities needed by organizations and their project teams, to scale-up their solutions; whether through better management, fundraising, or partnership development.
"Applications for funding can be made by organizations legally registered in the Asia Pacific region, based on funding available from our funding partners."
https://apnic.foundation/isif-asia/apply-for-funding/
2024 applications now closed
FRIDA is an initiative of LACNIC, the Internet Address Registry for Latin America and the Caribbean.
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Opens 26.04.2023.
Deadline for 2024, has passed: https://programafrida.net/en/projects/preselected-projects-2024
https://beta.nsf.gov/funding/opportunities/secure-trustworthy-cyberspace-satc
Supports research addressing cybersecurity and privacy, drawing on expertise in one or more of these areas: computing, communication and information sciences; engineering; economics; education; mathematics; statistics; and social and behavioral sciences.
Limited US organisations:
- "Institutions of Higher Education"
- Non-profits directly associated with educational or research activities such as museums, professional societies and research laboratories
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Full proposal accepted anytime
Google Summer of Code is a global, online mentoring program focused on introducing new contributors to open source software development. GSoC contributors work on a 12+ week programming project with the guidance of mentors from their open source organization. https://summerofcode.withgoogle.com/ https://developers.google.com/open-source/gsoc/help/student-stipends
- Student or OS beginner
- Organization working on OS
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Timeline for 2025 is not announced yet.
Free google ads to attract donors.
Non profit.
https://www.google.com/nonprofits/account/u/0/f/apply
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The Civic Digital Fellowship and Civic Innovation Corps are paid, 10-week summer fellowships for early-career technologists
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2025 Fellowship will run from June 9 to August 15, 2025. Applications will open in October.
Create a proposal outlining the documentation your project needs to create, update, or improve. Show us how you'll measure the impact of your project. Google Season of Docs provides financial support for your documentation project. At the end of the program, share what you've learned to improve knowledge of documentation in the open source community as a whole. https://developers.google.com/season-of-docs
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April 2, 2024 at 18:00 UTC
We are social investors who support a more effective democracy by funding free expression and journalism, arts and culture in community, research in areas of media and democracy, and in the success of American cities and towns where the Knight brothers once published newspapers. https://knightfoundation.org/grants/6001/ https://knightfoundation.org/funding-opp-research-norms-rules-governance-internet-digital-platforms/
From their webpage:
Knight Foundation is a national foundation with strong local roots. We invest in journalism, in the arts, and in the success of cities where brothers John S. and James L. Knight once published newspapers. Our goal is to foster informed and engaged communities, which we believe are essential for a healthy democracy.
We primarily fund U.S.-based organizations.
We seek innovative ideas that advance informed and engaged communities. To apply for funding, please submit a brief letter of inquiry.
The letter of inquiry is one way to apply for funding but not the only way. Applying to our open challenges is a separate process.
https://knight.fluxx.io/lois/new?utf8=%E2%9C%93&lang=en&commit=Apply+Now
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We invest up to 2 million usd in seed funding and take zero equity.
Your company must be a small business (fewer than 500 employees) located in the United States. At least 50% of your company’s equity must be owned by U.S. citizens or permanent residents. NSF does not fund companies that are majority-owned by multiple venture capital firms, private equity firms, or hedge funds, to participate in SBIR and STTR. All funded work, including work done by consultants and contractors, needs to take place in the United States. The project’s principal investigator (tech lead) must be legally employed at least 20 hours a week by the company seeking funding. The PI doesn’t need any advanced degrees. The principal investigator needs to commit to at least one month (173 hours) of work on a funded project per six months of project duration.
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The following evaluation is a short, free, online version of the full sustainability evaluation that the Institute can perform for your project.
It takes about 15 minutes to complete the questionnaire, which gives you the opportunity to review the main issues that affect the sustainability of your software. At the end of the evaluation, a report will be generated and emailed to you with sustainability advice that is tailored to your project.
The online evaluation investigates the following areas of your software:
What does your software do?
- Support
- Documentation
- Plans for the future
- Availability of your software
- Source code structure
- Open standards
- Building from source
- Installing the binary
- Testing
- Portability
- Community
- Contributor policy
- Identity
- Copyright
- Licences
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https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSf0ccsVdN-nXJCHLluJ-hANZlp8rDKgprJa0oTYiLZSDxh3DA/viewform
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You will be eligible to register with UKRI for the Horizon Europe guarantee through this route if you are a UK-based organisation which has been successful through a Horizon Europe call in scope of the first or second wave of the guarantee. For the consortium-style grants, you must remain a partner on the project and be listed on the Horizon Europe grant agreement as an Associated Partner.
"UK-based organisation which has been successful through a Horizon Europe call in scope of the first or second wave of the guarantee"
https://apply-for-innovation-funding.service.gov.uk/application/create/start-application/1181
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USA
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Google Outreach Program - Includsion Award Program https://research.google/outreach/air-program/
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List of many open competitions from many innovation areas (digital technology etc.)
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Re-opens in Summer 2023
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Supports "AI auditing tools" at the moment.
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Expired, 2024 grants awarded. 2025 plans not known yet.
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May 2 2023.
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Technology fund comming soon Research fund We welcome submissions that describe in-depth research proposals to improve and expand our understanding of the Wikimedia projects and their impact, introduce technical and socio-technical solutions that can enhance the technology in support of the Wikimedia projects, and advance the Wikimedia Movement towards the 2030 strategic direction. We will also consider funding proposals that focus on expanding and diversifying the community of researchers studying Wikimedia projects. For non-research related work, please see other sources of funding, including the Wikimedia Community Fund, the Wikimedia Alliances Fund and the forthcoming Wikimedia Technology Fund. Requests can be up to USD 50,000 and we intend to give a minimum of six grants during this funding cycle. Detailed budgets are not required as part of initial submissions but we request rough estimates in the following categories (if applicable) along with a brief explanation:
Salary or stipend Benefits Equipment Software Open access publishing costs Institutional overhead (up to 15% of total budget requested) Other (as specified) Final grant amounts are up to the discretion of the Research Fund Committee, who may reach out to finalists to ask for a reduced budget and a proportionally reduced scope of work. Funds will be disbursed in one payment at the beginning of the funding period (June 2023).
Research fund Individuals, groups, and organizations may apply. Any individual is allowed three open grants at any one time. This includes Rapid Funds. Groups or organizations can have up to five open grants at any one time.
Research fund https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Programs/Wikimedia_Research_%26_Technology_Fund/Wikimedia_Research_Fund
- 16 December 2022 AOE — Stage I application submission deadline.
- 23 March 2023 — Stage I selection result notifications.
- 31 March 2023 — Stage II application submission deadline.
- 4 May 2023 — Stage II selection result notifications.
ARDC makes grants that align with our mission to support amateur radio and digital communication science and technology. In addition to aligning with our mission, your project must align with at least one of our grantmaking categories:
- Support and growth of amateur radio,
- Education, and
- Research and Development.
- U.S.-based 501(c)(3) Public Charity, government agency, school, or university. NOTE: If your organization is a 501(c)(3) public charity, please consider whether or not your organization will meet the public support test after you receive an ARDC grant. We cannot offer legal advice on this matter, but we suggest that you consult with an attorney or CPA to ensure that you will meet this requirement. For more information on the public support test, go to Understanding the 501(c)(3) Public Support Test.
- International charity, nonprofit, school, or university.
- Radio clubs and groups who are NOT nonprofits may be eligible if they have a U.S.-based, nonprofit fiscal sponsor. For tips on finding a fiscal sponsor, see our instructions page.
- Individuals may be eligible if you work with a fiscal sponsor.
- February 1
- April 1
- July 1
- October 1 + Scholarship Applications Due
- https://www.bond.org.uk/funding-opportunities/
- https://www.ukri.org/what-we-offer/browse-our-areas-of-investment-and-support/
- https://github.com/PayDevs/awesome-oss-monetization
- https://guide.opentech.fund/appendix-iv-alternative-sources-of-support
- https://nlnet.nl/foundation/network.html
- https://www.ukri.org/opportunity/
- https://wellcome.org/grant-funding/schemes
- https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/funding
- https://www.dev.ngo/grants/
- https://grantnav.threesixtygiving.org/search
List of notable projects that have received grants.
Decentralized maps with an emphasis on building a modular map stack. Received a 100.000 USD donation from Samsung NEXT in January 2019 and a 49.000 EUR grant from NLNet in December 2021.
Decentralized email-based instant messaging with end-to-end encryption based on Autocrypt
. There are mobile applications for Android and iOS and also a desktop version. All implementations use an underlying core, which is being rewritten in rust.
Funded by OTF
.
Read about the launch of their multiparty chat encryption.
Funded by OTF
.
From the DAT
homepage:
Dat is a grant-funded, open-source, decentralized data sharing tool for efficiently versioning and syncing changes to data.
Funded by Knight Foundation
.
OpenCare
is a project trying to figure out ways of combining modern science and technology with communities. It got funded 1.6M EUR by Horizon 2020.
Ghost is an open source blogging platform. The project is run and organized by The Ghost Foundation, which is a non-profit organization. Ghost is completely free to use if you host it yourself. You can pay for it if you need help with hosting your blog. This is what funds further development and The Ghost Foundation calls this Sustainable Open Source.
Funded by MOSS.
Work of one of contributors was sponsored by NLNet Foundation, work by the main author was funded by OpenStreetMap foundation and Prototype Fund.
From the site:
OTF is soliciting proposals from service providers, organizations, and individuals interested in providing services to our Impact & Engagement Lab.
For more, go here.
This section lists organizations that aren't necessarily offering grant funding, but are still very important for creating a sound and healthy environment for open source projects.
From the Software Freedom Conservancy
homepage:
Software Freedom Conservancy, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization incorporated in New York. Software Freedom Conservancy helps promote, improve, develop, and defend Free, Libre, and Open Source Software (FLOSS) projects.
Conservancy offers a range of important services. From donations to assistance with fundraising, legal advice, contract negotiation to logistical support for conferences. Read more about their services here.
Some notable projects under their umbrella are:
Check out all their current 46 member projects.
The concept has been around for a while and can at times be the spark that makes a project take off.
There are different models, the traditional crowdfunded project asks for funds given some budget and project proposition. If the project reach the donation goal you can receive extra benefits apart from the actual product.
Other models are more focused on the community, where members of the community pitch in a certain amount of money per time unit, e.g. once a month.
- Alternative Sources of Support - List compiled by OTF
- Holger Krekel at 32c3 - Hacking EU funding for a decentralizing FOSS project
- Raking in the dough on Free and Open Source Software
- Paying the Piper
- Tech Cultivation
- Alternative Funding Sources - Renewable Freedom Foundation
- Awesome Indie
- Awesome Open Company
- Getting Paid for Open Source Work
- A handy guide to financial support for open source.
All content submitted to this project is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.