How to save the Internet in 2017

Inanna sailing
Jason and Gro
Thu 1 Dec 2016 00:40
Mozilla
 
 
Hello there,
 
If you’re worried about the health of the Internet these days, you’re not the only one. With 2016 almost in our rearview mirror, 2017 appears to pose significant new challenges to keeping the Internet open, safe and accessible to everyone.
 
Hard-won gains on net neutrality are at risk, and our online privacy and security can’t be taken for granted.
 
Support Mozilla. Donate before Dec 31st.
 
The Mozilla Foundation’s mission is to keep the Internet healthy for everyone. We want more people to gain control of their online lives. We want everyone to know how to be safer, and feel safer, online — and even build something that adds to the open nature of the web. After all, that’s how we got Firefox. That’s how we’ll keep the web strong.
 
Healthier means feeling more secure online. Knowing the encryption on your phone doesn’t have backdoors. Knowing what news is real and what is fake. Building an Internet that belongs to all of us—and not just a few.
 
Will you support us in this mission?
 

Contribute

 
If you’ve donated to Mozilla before, your support helped us preserve net neutrality, push for smart copyright reform in the European Union, and educate more users about protecting their privacy — we can’t thank you enough. We need your help now to expand our programs and keep the momentum going. That’s why we’re asking you to make your year-end gift right now.
 
If you’ve never given to Mozilla before, right now is the right time to chip in. Our year-end fundraising campaign fuels our work to build and protect the web we all depend on. So please make a secure online gift to Mozilla today.
 
If we want to grow and protect the promise of the Internet, we need everyone to be citizens of the web and support the Mozilla mission. We have big plans to grow this movement and safeguard our Internet freedoms, but we can’t do it without you behind us. That’s why we need your support.
 

Contribute

 
Thank you for all you do for Mozilla,
 
Mark Surman
Mozilla Foundation