The Tor Project, the nonprofit behind the most widely used anonymity network on the internet, is launching a crypto-native crowdfunding campaign to fund privacy and censorship-circumvention tools. The campaign runs from May 19 to June 18, 2026, and supports roughly 10 to 11 nonprofit projects working on everything from secure communications to public-interest digital infrastructure.
The organization whose browser gets launched approximately 4.8 million times daily has historically depended on traditional grants. This campaign represents a deliberate pivot toward decentralized funding, and it’s using quadratic funding to do it.
Quadratic funding meets internet freedom
The campaign uses quadratic funding, a model that prioritizes the number of unique donors over the size of individual contributions. If 500 people each give $5, that project gets more matching funds than one whale dropping $2,500. The math rewards breadth of support, not depth of pockets.
The matching pool sits at $115,000, contributed by Cake Wallet, Zcash Community Grants, Logos, and Octant. Those matching dollars get distributed proportionally based on how many individual contributors back each project, not how much total money flows in.
The campaign is co-led by Funding the Commons, an organization focused on sustainable funding mechanisms for public goods. Together with Tor, they’ve curated a roster of projects that includes SecureDrop, the whistleblower submission system used by major newsrooms, and OnionShare, which enables anonymous file sharing over the Tor network.
Why Tor is turning to crypto
The Tor Project has been accepting Bitcoin donations for years. But this campaign signals a structural shift in how it thinks about funding sustainability.
Traditional grant funding has been Tor’s bread and butter. Government grants, particularly from US agencies, have historically comprised a significant portion of the organization’s budget. That funding model carries an obvious tension: a privacy tool used by journalists, activists, and dissidents worldwide being bankrolled in part by the same governments that sometimes surveil those very users.
According to Freedom House, global internet freedom has declined for 15 consecutive years, with more countries restricting access to larger portions of the internet.
The projects and the backers
The 10 nonprofit projects selected for the campaign span a range of privacy and digital rights work. Beyond SecureDrop and OnionShare, the full roster covers censorship circumvention, secure communications, and what the organizers describe as public-interest digital infrastructure.
The matching pool sponsors are worth a closer look. Cake Wallet is a privacy-focused mobile wallet that supports Monero, Bitcoin, and other assets. Zcash Community Grants funds projects in the Zcash ecosystem, which is built around zero-knowledge proofs and transaction privacy. Logos describes itself as a movement building trust-minimized governance infrastructure. Octant is a platform for funding public goods using Ethereum staking yield.
What this means for investors and the broader crypto ecosystem
The risk, as always with quadratic funding, is sybil attacks, where bad actors create fake identities to game the matching formula. How Tor and Funding the Commons handle identity verification and fraud prevention will determine whether the campaign’s results are credible or contested. The 4.8 million daily browser launches suggest a massive potential donor base, but converting anonymous users into verified, unique contributors is a fundamentally different challenge than serving them web pages.
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