Tag Archives: philanthropy

Join Our Monthly Giving Circle and Support the Internet Archive!

Monthly donors sustain our work and ensure that the Internet Archive will always be free for all.

Our supporters have joined us arm-in-arm for decades against corporate interests, censorship, and digital erasure. Your commitment to preserving information and cultural heritage fuels our mission to provide Universal Access to All Knowledge. We want to celebrate you and thank you for being the foundation of our support system. 

Today, we invite you to join the Internet Archive Monthly Giving Circle.

Why Join?

Preservation and Accessibility are at the heart of who we are and what we do, so the following benefits are yours to enjoy when you begin your monthly donation at any level. By becoming a member of our Monthly Giving Circle, you unlock exclusive benefits designed just for you—such as: 

  • Exclusive Webcasts and Virtual Learning Opportunities: Dive deeper into topics you love with access to virtual events and learning sessions.  
  • Giving Circle Discount at Better World Books: Enjoy special savings on your used book purchases with our literacy partner, Better World Books.
  • Access to the Monthly Giving Circle Newsletter: Read our curated monthly newsletter filled with interesting finds from the Archive, surveys to get your input, and information about donor perks.
  • Submit Priority Questions at Book Talks: Have burning questions for featured authors or event presenters? You can submit priority questions for consideration, even if you cannot attend the event live.
  • Celebrations and Thank-You’s: We believe in recognizing and celebrating our supporters. Expect special thank-yous and celebrations at your donation anniversaries.
  • Powering Preservation: The knowledge that your recurring contributions sustain our efforts in digitizing, preserving, and providing access to millions of books, web pages, videos, and more.
  • Additional Petabyte Donor Perk ($250 USD+): We have something special just for our most generous supporters with a monthly contribution of $250 or more. Each month, receive a handpicked book from our staff delivered straight to your doorstep. Enjoy a recommended read directly from our bookshelves to yours!

Joining our Monthly Giving Circle is simple:

  • Head over to our Donate page
    • Ensure you have selected “monthly” as your preferred donation frequency.
  • Enter the amount you wish to contribute each month.
  • Input your payment information and click Donate.

Already a monthly donor? Thank you for being an integral part of our mission! You do not have to take any action to enjoy Monthly Giving Circle benefits. Email donations@archive.org to ensure you receive the Monthly Giving Circle newsletter which shares upcoming events, the latest discount codes, and more.

Together, we can continue expanding access to knowledge for generations.

Gratefully, 
Tom Mayer
Development Coordinator

Have a question about our monthly giving circle? Reach us at donations@archive.org.

Filecoin Foundation Grants 50,000 FIL to the Internet Archive

Amidst the speculative boom for NFTs and crypto-currencies, one decentralized technology foundation is taking the long view by investing in deep history and the far future. 

Today, the Filecoin Foundation announced a 50,000 FIL grant to the Internet Archive – the largest single donation in the digital library’s 25-year history. 

“Holy Crow! This is a big deal,” said Brewster Kahle, the Internet Archive’s founder. “And what are we going to do with it? We’re going to invest it in making the Internet Archive more decentralized, so that our digital history is available from thousands of computers, not just a few. The idea is to make a robust and private Internet that has a history that will persist over decades and maybe centuries.”

Filecoin is a decentralized storage system designed to preserve humanity’s most important information. The creators of Filecoin envisioned an independent foundation that would serve as the long-term governance body for the Filecoin ecosystem. In awarding the grant to the Internet Archive, Filecoin Foundation board chair, Marta Belcher, stressed the two organizations’ “common goal of preserving the web and fostering its future.”

It was back in 2015 that Protocol Labs‘ founder, Juan Benet, first visited the Internet Archive, to share his vision for an academic conference dedicated to preserving “humanity’s greatest treasures using decentralized storage.” Building on these conversations, the Internet Archive organized the  Decentralized Web Summit in 2016 in San Francisco, the first gathering of its kind. Back then, a decentralized web was mostly a concept, with little working code.

Decentralized technologists, Trent McConaghy of Ocean and Juan Benet of Protocol Labs at the 2016 Decentralized Web Summit at the Internet Archive in San Francisco.

Since 2016, the Internet Archive has worked with several decentralized tech startups to create a decentralized prototype of the digital library. And when the Filecoin main net took off in 2020, stored in Filecoin servers were public domain audiobooks and films from the Internet Archive. Together, the two organizations created the Filecoin Archives, a community-led project to curate, disseminate and preserve important open access to information often at risk of being lost.

“It’s wonderful to see Filecoin come of age. We started six years ago by putting out a call to make a Decentralized Web, a web that would serve us better than the current web–one that is now starting to be dominated by just a few tech behemoths. Can we make a game with many winners?” asked Kahle. “Filecoin has made a huge step forward by deploying decentralized storage at the exabyte level. That’s very different from AWS (Amazon Web Services). It has many participants, not just one player. And its protocols are open-source. We want to see more technologies like this. This was the original vision of the Decentralized Web that the Internet Archive was hoping for five, six years ago. And it’s starting to come to fruition and Filecoin is a leader in that area.”

Although purveyors of cryptocurrencies are often accused of being driven only by short-term gain, in this group Kahle sees a different motivation. “This donation by the Filecoin Foundation is significant financially for the Internet Archive, but I’d say it’s a more interesting one than that,” said the Internet Hall of Fame engineer. “It’s a donation by a new generation of technologists that are building interesting new technologies…bringing the Archive along with it to make it so that history is preserved –that the Internet Archive makes it into this next generation. That is an interesting thing! You don’t often see that. But the Filecoin Foundation, Filecoin and IPFS, and Juan Benet himself have always been interested in preserving history and how history can be woven into the present and the future of these technologies.”