The Tor Project has launched the Tor Project Membership Program to secure the network’s future by diversifying funding and deepening partnerships with other software providers.

The non-profit’s new scheme brings together Avast, DuckDuckGo, Insurgo, Mullvad VPN, and Team Cymru as founding members.

The companies are all involved in the security and privacy realm and will help secure diverse funding sources. The Tor network reduces our digital footprints, prevents tracking, and can enhance our overall personal privacy.

A system of nodes, .onion addresses, and relays spread across the world can circumvent censorship blocks, and the volunteer-led, open source network is a valuable tool for those concerned with being monitored online — including activists, journalists, civil rights organizations, and more.

As Tor has increased in popularity, some third-party organizations now include integrated support for the network in their products. GlobaLeaks and SecureDrop, open source whistleblowing frameworks, use Tor to maintain the privacy of users.

The Brave browser offers users a Tor-based “privacy window,” and Onion Share, a website publisher, relies on the Tor network to circumvent censorship attempts. Tor says that the membership program is a “new way for nonprofit and private sector organizations to financially support Tor’s work,” and in particular, it will give the organization an opportunity to create a “more agile development process.”

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