Crypto & Web3·May 19, 2026

Tor Project to lead Web3 crowdfunding to support internet freedom

Global internet freedom has declined for 15 consecutive years, with more countries restricting access to more of the internet, according to Freedom House.

Cointelegraph3 min readVerified
Tor Project to lead Web3 crowdfunding to support internet freedom
Image · Cointelegraph
The gist
5-point summary · 1 min

Global internet freedom has declined for 15 consecutive years, with more countries restricting access to more of the internet, according to Freedom House.

  • The Tor Project is a nonprofit with a mission to advance human rights and freedoms online by encrypting internet traffic through free and open-source tools such as Tor Browser.
  • Global internet freedom declines Global internet freedom has declined for 15 consecutive years, with conditions deteriorating in almost 40% of the 72 countries assessed in Freedom House’s 2025 Freedom on the Net study.
  • Asia was the primary hotbed for digital censorship, with governments in 10 Asian countries, including China, India, North Korea, Thailand and Myanmar, imposing more than 50 new restrictions and affecting roughly 2 billion people.
  • Internet freedom in the West is also under greater threat, with the US withdrawing from the Freedom Online Coalition — an alliance explicitly committed to defending human rights and openness on the internet — in January.
  • This news article is produced in accordance with Cointelegraph’s Editorial Policy and aims to provide accurate and timely information.
$115,000$10$10040%
In this article
BTC· Bitcoin
Loading…
Binance

A coalition of privacy and internet freedom advocates led by the Tor Project has announced a new crypto funding campaign to support censorship-resistant digital infrastructure.The first-of-its-kind Web3 crowdfunding campaign for internet freedom tools will support 10 nonprofit projects working across privacy, censorship circumvention, secure communications and public-interest digital infrastructure, according to the campaign leaders, Tor Project and Funding the Commons.The campaign, which kicks off May 19, accepts crypto contributions in Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Zcash (ZEC), Monero (XMR) and Golem (GLM).The campaign comes as privacy advocates argue that internet freedom is being eroded on a global scale. Internet shutdowns, including long-term systemic censorship, affected more than half of the world’s population in 2025.Meanwhile, governments around the world are “increasingly exerting control over the technology that people depend on to access the free and open internet,” Freedom House reported.Quadratic funding model for fairnessAn initial $115,000 matching pool supported by Cake Wallet, Zcash Community Grants, Logos and Octant will amplify donations made through June 18 using a “participatory matching model” to reward broad community participation rather than large single donors.The campaign uses quadratic funding, a model that rewards breadth of participation over donation size, meaning 10 donors giving $10 each outweigh one donor pledging $100.The model increases support for projects backed by broader community participation, “giving more people a meaningful voice in how funds are distributed,” the coalition said. Related: Privacy advocates slam reCAPTCHA update they say locks out de-Googled phones“Quadratic funding is one of Web3’s answers to how critical infrastructure gets funded: Institutional money follows community signals, not the other way around,” said David Casey, director of Funding the Commons. The Tor Project is a nonprofit with a mission to advance human rights and freedoms online by encrypting internet traffic through free and open-source tools such as Tor Browser. Global internet freedom declines Global internet freedom has declined for 15 consecutive years, with conditions deteriorating in almost 40% of the 72 countries assessed in Freedom House’s 2025 Freedom on the Net study. Asia was the primary hotbed for digital censorship, with governments in 10 Asian countries, including China, India, North Korea, Thailand and Myanmar, imposing more than 50 new restrictions and affecting roughly 2 billion people. Internet freedom in the West is also under greater threat, with the US withdrawing from the Freedom Online Coalition — an alliance explicitly committed to defending human rights and openness on the internet — in January. Netizens are increasingly turning to virtual private networks, or VPNs, to circumvent censorship, but more than a dozen countries actively block or criminalize VPN use, while many others impose partial restrictions.The erosion of internet freedom over the past 15 years. Source: Freedom HouseIn January, Iran imposed a nationwide internet blackout to suppress mass protests over the economic crisis, leading to a surge in usage of Bitchat, a decentralized peer-to-peer Jack Dorsey project that enables communication over Bluetooth. Magazine: Guide to the top and emerging global crypto hubs: Mid-2026Cointelegraph is committed to independent, transparent journalism. This news article is produced in accordance with Cointelegraph’s Editorial Policy and aims to provide accurate and timely information. Readers are encouraged to verify information independently.

Integrity note  ·  Xela does not rewrite or paraphrase article content. The excerpt above is the source publication's own words, sanitized for display. For the full piece — including any quotes, charts, or images — read it at Cointelegraph. Xela's rewritten version is off for this story, so there's no editorial angle attached — you're getting the source's reporting unfiltered. When the rewrite is on, we add a What this means block underneath with the operator/trader takeaway.

What people are saying

Discussion

Hot takes

0/280

Loading takes…

Comments

Discussion · 0

Sign in to comment, like, and save articles.

Sign in

Loading comments…

Newsletter

Track crypto & web3 every morning.

Daily digest tuned to this beat. The 5 stories most worth your time. Unsubscribe anytime.