Since 1997 NLnet has been providing funding to alarge diversity of efforts that all somehow improve the internet. These strategic efforts take place at many different layers of technology — from better software that offers security by design to more trustworthy (open) hardware, from differential privacy to redesigning core technical protocols. NLnet believesthe internet is for end users, but there are many interests and invisible hands in the market that push it in other directions — meaning continuous effort is needed to take care the internet evolves in the right direction.
In order to cater for that wide spectrum of ideas and challenges, our preferred instrument is thecompetitive open call. (your donation helps to fuel those open calls!)
Sometimes a more targeted approach is required. Pending availability of such funds we may put in targetted effort in areas of specific interest. Such a focus can help increase critical mass, and increase the impact of projects even further.
We also can operateregional funds, donor advised funds as well asNamed Funds.
The goal of the NGI0 Commons Fund is to help deliver, mature and scale building blocks for the digital commons to help restore public ownership of the internet. We support free and open source projects across the whole technology spectrum, from libre silicon to middleware, from P2P infrastructure to convenient end user applications. We need your contributions to help reshape the state of play, and create anopen, trustworthy and reliable internet for all.
Between February 2024 and 2027 we offer R&D grants between 5.000 to 50.000 euro with rolling open calls every two months. A scale-up programme is available for projects with proven potential. Interested? Continue reading aboutNGI0 Commons Fund, orpropose a project.
The goal of theOpen Social Fund is to help to restore balance in the social media landscape of today and tomorrow. By redecentralising this part of the internet and handling the functionality required as a native part of the world wide web, we help make this technology to be more robust and healthier for users. NLnet has historically supported research and development of manyW3C ActivityPub related efforts, and will continue to do so in the foreseeable future. The Open Social Fund is intended to be complementary to the funding of R&D work, funding auxiliary efforts not within the scope of our larger funds likeNGI0 Commons Fund, and the work done inFediversity.
NGI Fediversity aims to bring easy-to-use, hosting/cloud services withservice portability andpersonal freedom at their core to everyone. As a pilot from theNext Generation Internet initiative, Fediversity wants to provide everyone with high-quality, secure IT systems for everyday use. Without tracking, without exploitation, in a way that runs everywhere and scales effortlessly. Fediversity is based onNixOS, a disruptive Linux distribution with a unique approach to package and configuration management. Built on top of the functional Nix package manager, NixOS can be configured in a completely declarative manner, which makes upgrading systems reliable, and has many other advantages. Because it isreproducible, it is ideally suited forcomplex deployment scenario's where consistent behaviour, stability and configurability matter. As a part of theNGI Fediversity pilot, a dedicated grant programme is available.
Mobile devices like phones and tablets have become pervasive: they are ourgateway to the world at large, function as anexternal brain and are increasingly part of even our mostintimate moments. People should therefore be far moreempowered when it comes to such a critical dependency. As a pilot from theNext Generation Internet initiative,Mobifree is designed to push more openness into the Android ecosystem, hopefully contributing to a virtuous cycle of innovation throughfree and open source software,libre hardware andopen standards. Mobifree is an R&D programme bringing together a number of "movers and shakers" of the Android ecosystem, in order to deliver a comprensive development effort and advance a number of free and open source technologies. As a part of theNGI Mobifree pilot, a dedicated grant programme is available.
In the digital economy, payments play a critical role. Yet online payment systems tend to allow for far less privacy than paying with a bank note or coins, especially when using proprietary solutions like Google Pay or Apple Pay. When interacting with the offline economy comes into play, the alternative of paying with all kind of volatile cryptocurrencies isn't a viable option either.NGI TALER is a programme funded by theEuropean Commission and theSwiss State to roll out anew electronic payment system that benefits everyone: people, merchants, banks, financial authorities, auditors and anti-corruption researchers.
The project doesn't have to start from scratch either, but builds on the strong foundations ofGNU Taler — the privacy-preserving digital payment system developed by theGNU community andTaler Systems SA. This offers privacy for those that make payments, while enforcing transparency on those that sell. By providingmicro payments atvery low overhead, GNU Taler permits internet business models to shift away from advertising revenue or subscription models, especially for online publishers.No-risk transactions can lower transaction fees and open online payments for the underbanked population and citizens marginalized from digitalisation. As a part of theNGI TALER pilot, a dedicated grant programme is available.
NGI Zero Review is a three year support programme not offering money, but various targeted services to free and open source projects within theNext Generation Internet initiative. Goal is to improve the quality and inclusiveness of these projects, and make them more sustainable where possible by supporting the most promising ideas to live up to high standards (sometimes called 'walk the talk') in terms of security, privacy, accessibility, open source licensing compliance, standardisation, etc. NGI Zero Review runs until 2025
We have more excellent projects requesting money than we can afford. If you or your organisation have means to support these activities, let us know. NLnet welcomes your targeted donations of any size to let us help more projects. We have many interesting projects coming to us outside of our current themes (courtesy of areallyopen call), but we understand that not every project fits with every donor. By supporting a dedicated fund, NLnet guarantees that your money will only go to projects in your specific area of interest. NLnet is a charity established since 1997, with its head office in Amsterdam. NLnet foundation is recognised by the Netherlands tax authorities, and your donations are likely tax deductible.
Pleasecontact us for more information.
NLnet itself chooses to fund globally, because technologyis a global phenomenon — stimulating open technology is important for humans across all geographic, social and cultural barriers. However, building local capacity and skills in your own commuity can be a very legimitate concern of a donor. If you want to give back to your own community by means of your will, and yet want to maximise the benefit for the rest of the planet, NLnet can help by creating aregional fund. NLnet will earmark the money you bequeath, and guarantees it will be spent on projects in the region of your choice. Because NLnet is a registered charity, your donation gets the most friendly fiscal treatment.
There is a good legal basis in EU case law for cross-border charitable donation and tax-relief — Persche (C-318/07, also Official Journal of the EU):
Where a taxpayer claims, in a Member State, the deduction for tax purposes of gifts to bodies established and recognised as charitable in another Member State, such gifts come within the compass of the provisions of the EC Treaty relating to the free movement of capital, even if they are made in kind in the form of everyday consumer goods.
If you want to establish a regionally focussed fund related to open technnology, or donate to an existing regional fund, please contactBob Goudriaan orMichiel Leenaars.
Do you want to promote the technical and social values you have after your life? If you want to "pay it forward" and enable exiting new ideas and talented and dedicated people of all ages to contribute to the open internet and open source technology, NLnet can help by creating aNamed fund. Because NLnet is a registered charity, the legacy you leave benefits from very favourable tax conditions allowing to maximise the impact of your fund.
There is a good legal basis in EU case law for cross-border charitable donation and tax-relief — Persche (C-318/07, also Official Journal of the EU):
Where a taxpayer claims, in a Member State, the deduction for tax purposes of gifts to bodies established and recognised as charitable in another Member State, such gifts come within the compass of the provisions of the EC Treaty relating to the free movement of capital, even if they are made in kind in the form of everyday consumer goods.
If you want to establish a Named fund related to open technnology, or donate to an existing Named fund in honour of that person, please contactBob Goudriaan orMichiel Leenaars.
The following thematic funds are still active in the sense that there are ongoing projects but they are no longer accepting new proposals.
Do you want to help create anopen, trustworthy and reliable internet for all, and have an idea to for instance develop alternatives and improvements to core internet hardware, software and protocols which make the internet more robust, or which removes gatekeepers, choke points and surveillance capabilities? Are you working on security, privacy, interoperability, high availability and scalability of decentralised technologies which will allow everyone to benefit from both 'local first'and from economies of scale without unnecessary centralisation?
NGI Zero Core runs from 2023 to December 2026. There are ongoing projects but there will be no more open calls.
Reliability, confidentiality, integrity, security and data portability should be the 'new normal' of the internet, something ordinary users should not have to worry about ߞ users should be in control. But how do we achieve trustworthiness and data sovereignty? Can your idea help strenghten the position of end users, do you have ideas on how to improve the status quo on the internet and make it more resilient, transparent and open?
NGI Zero Entrust runs from 2022 to 2025. There are ongoing projects but there will be no more open calls.
The following thematic funds have been completed, and there are neither projects running nor new projects being accepted. Not because the topics are not important anymore in this day and age, but because we do not currently have any budget specifically earmarked for proposals within these topics. We do welcomeproposals for our open call, as well asdonations that would allow us to revitalise one or more of these thematic funds.
The internet lies at the heart of our modern economies and societies, but it was not designed to be used in the way we use it now. Additional innovations are needed, in particular to make usage of remote resources on the internet more trustworthy and secure. The goal of NGI Assure is to support projects that design and engineer reusable building blocks for the Next Generation Internet as part of a complete, strong chain of assurances for all stakeholders regarding the source and integrity of identities, identifiers, data, cyberphysical systems, service components and processes.
Read more about theNGI Assure Fund orcheck out the projects which were supported.
NGI Assure was made possible with financial support from theEuropean Commission'sNext Generation Internet programme, under the aegis ofDG Communications Networks, Content and Technology under grant agreement No957073.
Many technologies in popular use were never designed with privacy, security or even extensibility in mind, or failed to fundamentally address key issues at the design phase. The research topic of Privacy and Trust enhancing technologies is 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.
Read more about thePrivacy & Trust Fund orcheck out the projects which were supported between 2018 and 2022.
NGI0 PET was made possible with financial support from theEuropean Commission'sNext Generation Internet programme, under the aegis ofDG Communications Networks, Content and Technology, underHorizon 2020 grant agreement No825310.
NGI0 Discovery was made possible with financial support from theEuropean Commission'sNext Generation Internet programme, under the aegis ofDG Communications Networks, Content and Technology, underHorizon 2020 grant agreement No825322.
2025-02-01 -Let's meet at FOSDEM 2025
2024-12-27 -38C3 Here We Come!
2024-11-28 -Webinar: Ask Us For Help: Practical Support for NGI Beneficiaries
56 Projects Receive Grants for Improving Core Technological Building Blocks 2025-03-21
Apply for funding before April 1st 2025 2025-02-01
Seven New Projects Selected to Strengthen the NGI Pilot Programmes 2025-01-22
Michiel Leenaars Speaks at FOSDEM about NGI and Europe's Digital Sovereignty 2025-01-20
50 Free and Open Source Projects Selected for NGI Zero grants 2025-01-01