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Find similar grantsCommon Good Cyber Fund is sponsored by Internet Society Foundation. This multi-year funding initiative supports nonprofit organizations that deliver critical services underpinning the Internet's core infrastructure and protecting civil society actors at high risk, including NGOs, journalists, and human rights defenders.
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Common Good Cyber Fund Grant Program | Internet Society Foundation Facebook Twitter Linkedin Instagram Rss Email This content is available in the following languages The Internet Society English is the current language Español Français Common Good Cyber Fund Grant Program The Common Good Cyber Fund (CGCF), launched in 2025 in close collaboration with the Common Good Cyber Ecosystem Committee and a Strategic Advisory Committee, aims to sustain nonprofit organizations whose work strengthens the public-interest cybersecurity ecosystem.
CGCF consists of pooled donations from a mix of donors, including the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Craig Newmark Philanthropies, the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office of the United Kingdom, Global Affairs Canada, the Internet Society, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
Digital and cyber threats are rising in frequency and sophistication, with disproportionate impacts on vulnerable communities and underserved regions where digital defenses are weakest. High-risk actors, including NGOs, journalists, human rights defenders, and dissidents, face targeted activity that can reach across borders in the online information environment.
The nonprofit cybersecurity ecosystem plays a vital yet under-recognized role in countering these threats, mitigating harm, and defending online civic space. However, this ecosystem remains severely underfunded and overstretched, leaving community actors and vulnerable populations exposed to escalating digital cyber threats.
The Common Good Cyber Fund is designed to strengthen this ecosystem by supporting the nonprofits who provide these critical services. An initial pilot program was initiated in late 2025, which provided a proof of concept for an open call for applications launching in June 2026.
The Common Good Cyber Fund seeks to fund nonprofits across the globe whose work supports the following objectives: Objective 1: Maintenance of critical cybersecurity infrastructure. Objective 2: Delivery of scalable support to secure Internet users from digital harm, including state-directed cyber activity and digital transnational repression .
Objective 3: Advancement of a safer Internet for vulnerable groups and high-risk communities, including civil society and journalists. The descriptions below provide additional detail on what the program objectives look like in practice. Applicant organizations’ work may span more than one of these objectives, but proposals must indicate the primary objective their work aligns with in their application.
Objective 1: Maintenance of critical cybersecurity infrastructure This program objective supports the Internet’s shared security “plumbing”, the technical services and operational capabilities that many organizations rely on, but few can fund on their own. Strong proposals deliver durable improvements that reduce risk beyond a single organization or community and are designed to keep working after the grant ends.
Examples of work supported under this objective can include: internet infrastructure protection, including DNS security, routing security, secure defaults, and other widely deployed controls large-scale threat detection and analysis, including noncommercial threat intelligence that can be shared responsibly response-enabling services that help others act faster, including tooling, coordination, automation, and operational support maintenance and improvement of security-relevant open systems where long-term upkeep is the primary constraint Objective 2: Delivery of scalable support to secure Internet users from digital harm, including state-directed cyber activity and Digital Transnational Repression This program objective funds capabilities that protect people and organizations facing persistent digital threats, including state-directed cyber activity and digital transnational repression (DTNR).
It prioritizes approaches that help high-risk users prevent compromise, respond quickly, and recover safely.
Examples of work supported under this objective can include: rapid response and incident assistance for civil society and independent media, including account takeover recovery, device triage, and secure restoration workflows threat-informed hardening and secure onboarding for high-risk users, including safer email and endpoint practices, multi-factor authentication (MFA), account recovery, backups, and secure communications, tailored to real attacker tradecraft protective service delivery at scale, including managed support models, “clinics,” remote assistance, and regional responder networks that can handle volume without lowering quality privacy-preserving coordination and information sharing that surfaces patterns and actionable indicators without exposing beneficiaries or partners This objective also recognizes that targeted digital harm is not evenly distributed.
DTNR and related campaigns can include gendered tactics, including sexualized harassment and smear campaigns that disproportionately target women in public-facing roles.
Objective 3: Advancement of a safer Internet for vulnerable groups and high-risk communities, including civil society and journalists This program objective supports work that translates operational insight into safer outcomes for vulnerable groups and high-risk communities, including civil society and journalists.
In this program, advocacy is eligible when it is tightly connected to security outcomes, such as adoption of safer practices, improved protective mechanisms, and stronger coordination that reduces exposure to harm.
Examples of work supported under this focus area can include: evidence-based policy or standards work grounded in operational threat realities, aimed at concrete improvements in protective practice, platform safeguards, or security defaults responsible vulnerability and abuse reporting pathways, including coordination that improves how threats are surfaced and mitigated without increasing exposure for targets norms and coordination mechanisms that improve ecosystem response, such as incident coordination protocols, trusted escalation channels, and shared approaches to protecting at-risk groups Eligibility and Selection Criteria CGCF supports nonprofit organizations whose work aligns with the Fund’s objectives and who provide cybersecurity infrastructure and/or direct services for high-risk digital actors.
In 2026, CGCF expects to prioritize organizations capable of ecosystem building, especially those based in the global majority, or those with the capacity to regrant to smaller organizations working in the global majority.
Organizations who demonstrate a history of addressing issues of gender equity, including technology-facilitated gender-based violence (TFGBV), will be additionally prioritized when applying for grants aligned with Objectives 2 and 3. Applications are assessed based on: Confirmation that the applicant is a qualifying nonprofit organization ( U.S. 501(c)(3) or equivalent ) focused on cybersecurity.
Confirmation that the applicant organization has an official bank account in their name that can receive funds from a foundation based in the United States Alignment with CGCF’s purpose and program objectives. Evidence that the organization delivers cybersecurity infrastructure and/or services that protect high-risk communities and strengthen broader resilience.
Demonstrated organizational capacity, including credible implementation and governance. Potential to contribute to ecosystem building, including reach across geographies and, where relevant, the ability to support smaller organizations.
Governance and Decision-Making The Internet Society Foundation is the grantmaking organization that developed the Common Good Cyber Fund grant program in furtherance of the Fund’s purposes, manages grant applications, reviews applicants and prospective grantees, selects grantees, and oversees grant management and reporting.
The Global Cyber Alliance (GCA) chairs the Fund’s Strategic Advisory Committee , which is made up of technical and policy experts who provide strategic advice and guidance to help ensure the Fund remains responsive to evolving threats and needs. To support the open call for proposal process, an Independent Program Review Committee (IPRC) will be convened.
Reviewers will be selected from diverse backgrounds and geographies, including cybersecurity experts and cross-sector professionals (civil society, journalism, policy, and research). In 2026, the Internet Society Foundation is expected to award at least USD $3. 5 million through multi-year operating grants funded by the Common Good Cyber Fund.
Grants awarded through this open call are expected to be two-year awards, typically in the range of USD $100,000 to $300,000, with a maximum total grant amount of $300,000 over the full grant period. The call for proposals will launch by June 2026, with an application window open for at least six weeks. Applications will be screened by late July, with the strongest applications advancing to external review.
Declined applicants will be notified of the decisions after grant awards have been made. Due to the high volume of applications anticipated, individual feedback on declined proposals will not be possible. As part of the application process, applicants will complete the online form and upload a set of supporting documents in the Foundation’s grants management system (Fluxx).
Preparing these materials in advance is recommended to support timely submission. Applicants are strongly encouraged to register their organization in Fluxx prior to the application window opening. Applicants must be registered in Fluxx at least 24 hours before the application window deadline , and applications must be submitted prior to the deadline to be considered for funding.
No e-mail submissions will be accepted.
Application documents include: A current operational budget Tax Identification Document Organization governing document (such as articles of incorporation, organization charter, or bylaws) A list of current institutional funders and the amounts they provide National tax returns from the two most recent available fiscal years Audited financials from the two most recent available fiscal years (Optional) 501(c)(3) Equivalency Determination (if applicable and if available).
Info session to learn more about this program: Info Session on 20 May at 14:00 UTC This Webinar will be held in English with live interpretation in French and Spanish. Register today .
Common Good Cyber Fund Application Guide Common Good Cyber Fund Evaluation Framework and Grantee Reporting Metrics (coming soon) If you have questions about this program or the application process, please email [email protected] The Internet is for Everyone The Internet Society Foundation supports the vision of the Internet Society and its work for an open, globally-connected, secure, and trustworthy Internet for everyone.
Key questions and narrative sections extracted from the solicitation.
Problem Statement: Clearly articulate the issue being addressed
Theory of Change: Explain the envisioned changes and how activities will achieve them
Goals and Activities: Define specific, measurable objectives
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs): Establish measurable targets to track progress
Project sustainability considerations: Address long-term viability of the project
Comprehensive project narrative (Module 3: Finish Your Grant Application)
Describe your organization's demonstrated ability to deliver cybersecurity infrastructure or services protecting high-risk communities
Describe your organization's credible implementation and governance capacity
Explain your potential for ecosystem building, especially if based in the global majority
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Nonprofit organizations (Not directly for individuals, but individuals within supported nonprofits would benefit). Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Pilot grants awarded were between $200,000 and $400,000 to organizations Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Research on Circular Economy, Smart Manufacturing, and Energy-Efficient Microelectronics is sponsored by U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Advanced Materials & Manufacturing Technologies Office (AMMTO). This funding opportunity supports innovative technology R&D across the manufacturing sector with a focus on circular economy, smart manufacturing, and energy-efficient microelectronics. While the stated deadline for full applications has passed, AMMTO frequently issues similar solicitations, and this highlights a relevant area of interest for the DOE.
America's Seed Fund (SBIR/STTR) - Cybersecurity and Authentication is sponsored by U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF). Supports startups and small businesses to translate research into products and services, including cybersecurity and authentication, to secure national defense and protect the public. Includes research requiring privacy and security-preserving resources for artificial intelligence.