Supported Projects
Right to Obscurity supports all of the non-profits and organizations listed below. 10% of all profit from Right to Obscurity is donated to non-profits and organizations that fight for our digital rights on an annual basis. All donations will be fully disclosed every January on our blog.

Electronic Frontier Foundation is a non-profit group founded in San Francisco in 1990. It is the leading activist organization fighting to protect civil liberties in the digital world. Through litigation, policy work, and public education, it challenges government surveillance and corporate data abuse to defend privacy, free expression, and innovation online.

Freedom of the Press Foundation is a non-profit that defends public-interest journalism in the digital age. It supports investigative reporting through tools like SecureDrop, an open-source platform that allows whistleblowers to share information safely. The foundation also advocates for legal protections, transparency and secure communication practices essential for a free and independent press.

The Tor Project builds free software and open networks that help people browse the internet anonymously. By routing traffic through a global network of volunteer relays, Tor protects users from network surveillance and traffic analysis. It enables journalists, activists and ordinary users to bypass censorship and communicate securely, even in repressive environments.

Signal is a nonprofit messaging app designed to make private communication simple and accessible for everyone. It uses the open-source Signal Protocol to provide end-to-end encryption for all messages and calls by default. The app collects minimal data and includes features like sealed sender that prevent even Signal from knowing who is communicating with whom, offering strong protection against surveillance.

Session is a private messaging app that does not require a phone number or email to sign up. It runs on a decentralized network and routes messages through multiple nodes using onion routing to hide IP addresses. This design prevents metadata collection and makes it extremely difficult for governments or ISPs to block, track or monitor user activity, even with advanced traffic analysis.

Nym is a privacy network that protects users from metadata surveillance at the network level. It uses a global mixnet where internet traffic is encrypted, shuffled and padded with cover traffic to obscure who is talking to whom and when. This makes it resistant to AI-driven traffic analysis and mass surveillance, offering strong protection for users, apps and services that depend on anonymity.

Vivaldi is a web browser built for power users who want full control over their experience. It includes built-in privacy features such as tracker blocking, ad blocking and private search. Its end-to-end encrypted sync lets users safely carry settings and data across devices without relying on big tech platforms. Vivaldi is designed to be fast, customizable and respectful of user privacy.