Digital Infrastructure Grants
Fiscal Host: Open Collective Foundation
Research grants for the study of digital infrastructure maintenance.

Contribute
Become a financial contributor.
Projects
Support the following initiatives from Digital Infrastructure Grants.
Project
Digital Infrastructure program 2023
Project
An Indian case study of governance, implementation and private sector role of open source infrast...
Project
Developing an implementation framework for funders of digital infrastructure with guides, program...
Project
What are the security ramifications of the extensive use of open-source software in modern softwa...
Project
How can African participation in the development, maintenance and application of the global open ...
Project
Will cross-company visibility into shared free and open source dependencies lead to cross-company...
Project
How do we build, sustain & improve city-led open source infrastructure projects?
Project
How a Creative Commons model for API Terms of Service participate in the creation of open, safe a...
Project
Research the structurers, contributions, financial sustainability of open source cooperatives
Project
Supporting projects to implement research-informed best practices at the time of need. Areas of w...
Project
How are COVID data infrastructures created and transformed by builders and maintainers from the o...
Project
What makes indegenous open source projects & collectives critical digital infrastructure and how ...
Project
How do open source tools contribute towards creating a multilingual internet?
Project
Operational budget for the Digital Infrastructure grants initiative
Top financial contributors
Ford Foundation
$605,000 USD since Aug 2020
Sloan Foundation
$605,000 USD since Feb 2021
Open Society Foundations
$100,000 USD since Jul 2020
Omidyar Network
$50,000 USD since Oct 2020
Mozilla Foundation
$25,000 USD since Aug 2020
Digital Infrastructure Grants is all of us
Our contributors 8
Thank you for supporting Digital Infrastructure Grants.
Pia Mancini
Admin
Benjamin Nick...
Admin
Richard Littauer
Admin
Ford Foundation
$605,000 USD
Sloan Foundation
$605,000 USD
Open Society ...
$100,000 USD
Omidyar Network
$50,000 USD
Mozilla Found...
$25,000 USD

About
Everything in our modern society, from hospitals and banks to universities and social media platforms, runs on software. Nearly all of this software is built on “digital infrastructure,” a foundation of free and public code that is designed to solve common challenges. The benefits of digital infrastructure are numerous: it can reduce the cost of setting up new businesses, support data-driven discovery across research disciplines, enable complex technologies such as smartphones to talk to each other, and allow everyone to have access to important innovations like encryption that would otherwise be too expensive. Sharing code to address common challenges is in principle cheaper, easier and more efficient.
While the collective action problems that characterize infrastructure funding are well-explored, the industrial organization of digital infrastructure is less well-understood. In 2016, the Ford Foundation funded a report by Nadia Eghbal titled “Roads and Bridges: The Unseen Labor Behind Our Digital Infrastructure” that described how that the development and maintenance of digital infrastructure often falls to communities of volunteers who take it upon themselves to maintain this infrastructure in their own free time and for little or no money. Unsurprisingly, this leads to significant risks to the open internet and the ability to develop new, innovative research and businesses within it.
In order to better understand the incentives and constraints that influence the maintenance of digital infrastructure, in 2018 the Sloan and Ford Foundations funded a portfolio of 13 research projects. In some cases the findings of these projects open up further questions, while in others they suggest interventions that could strengthen community practices.
To continue to advance this agenda, this RFP invited proposals to further study the maintenance of digital infrastructure. This new RFP is being funded again by Ford Foundation and Sloan Foundation as well as Mozilla, Omidyar and Open Society Foundations. .
In addition, for this second phase we've invited proposals that would move findings from the first funded research cohort into practice.
While the collective action problems that characterize infrastructure funding are well-explored, the industrial organization of digital infrastructure is less well-understood. In 2016, the Ford Foundation funded a report by Nadia Eghbal titled “Roads and Bridges: The Unseen Labor Behind Our Digital Infrastructure” that described how that the development and maintenance of digital infrastructure often falls to communities of volunteers who take it upon themselves to maintain this infrastructure in their own free time and for little or no money. Unsurprisingly, this leads to significant risks to the open internet and the ability to develop new, innovative research and businesses within it.
In order to better understand the incentives and constraints that influence the maintenance of digital infrastructure, in 2018 the Sloan and Ford Foundations funded a portfolio of 13 research projects. In some cases the findings of these projects open up further questions, while in others they suggest interventions that could strengthen community practices.
To continue to advance this agenda, this RFP invited proposals to further study the maintenance of digital infrastructure. This new RFP is being funded again by Ford Foundation and Sloan Foundation as well as Mozilla, Omidyar and Open Society Foundations. .
In addition, for this second phase we've invited proposals that would move findings from the first funded research cohort into practice.
Given the impacts and challenges facing open source communities worldwide, these research projects span the globe, including initiatives in the United States, South Africa, India, Brazil, and Mexico. Researchers will focus on issue areas including:
- How COVID data systems are created and transformed by the open source community;
- How indigenous communities and land defenders in Brazil have been using digital infrastructure in their fight against climate change;
- How do perceptions of unfairness when contributing to an open source project affect their sustainability;
- How public-private cooperation at the national level in India can support the development of software solutions to digitize government services.
Our team

Budget
Transparent and open finances.
Debit from FOSS & Multilingual Computing to Anushah Hossain •
-$19,250.00USD
Paid
Invoice #138724
+$19,250.00USD
Completed
Contribution #661966
-$19,250.00USD
Completed
Contribution #661966
$
Today’s balance$97,099.23 USD
Total raised
$1,281,440.94 USD
Total disbursed
$1,184,341.71 USD