Grant for the Web
Grant for the Web is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Grant for the Web.
Grant for the Web is a company.
Key people at Grant for the Web.
Key people at Grant for the Web.
Grant for the Web is a $100 million fund, not a traditional company, initiated to support innovation in Web Monetization—an open standard for micropayments on the web using the Interledger Protocol. Funded and led by Coil in collaboration with Mozilla and Creative Commons, it disburses grants to developers, creators, and organizations building tools, infrastructure, and content ecosystems that promote decentralized, ad-free monetization models.[1][3] The fund targets foundational technologies, creative experiments, and community activations through three grant tiers: Spark ($5,000–$15,000), Mid ($15,000–$50,000), and Flagship ($50,000–$100,000), with awards spanning projects like legal support for innovators and global business model experiments.[1][4]
It serves web creators, developers, and underserved content producers (e.g., investigative journalists, marginalized communities) poorly supported by ads or subscriptions, solving the problem of invasive data-driven advertising by enabling seamless, privacy-respecting micropayments and open web standards.[1][3]
Launched in 2019, Grant for the Web emerged from Coil's vision to counter the web's ad-dominated model, which Tim Berners-Lee and early web pioneers likely never envisioned. Coil partnered with open web advocates Mozilla and Creative Commons, committing $100 million over about five years to jump-start Web Monetization adoption.[1][3] Key figures include Coil's leadership (e.g., Michelle Sanver, implied in context), Mozilla's Ashley Boyd (VP of Advocacy), and Creative Commons' Cable Green, who emphasized experiments like micropayments in CC Search.[1][3]
Early traction included public calls for proposals, with Mozilla announcing the first in 2020 for ecosystem-building projects. By 2021, it awarded grants to W3C ($268,700) for standardization and inclusion efforts, and later cohorts funded 27 global projects from 150 applications, ranging from gift card explorations to sustainable coffee models in West Africa.[2][4] This evolution shifted from initial funding to ongoing cohorts judged by independent panels, fostering a grantee community with skill-sharing.[4]
Grant for the Web rides the wave of web3 and decentralized finance trends, addressing ad fatigue and data privacy crises amid collapsing ad economies. Its timing aligns with rising demand for alternatives to Big Tech silos, promoting open standards like Web Monetization to compete with billion-dollar proprietary payment platforms.[3] Market forces favoring it include Interledger's cross-border potential for financial inclusion and growing creator economy needs, influencing the ecosystem by funding standardization (via W3C), diverse content, and tools that enhance interoperability, accessibility, and equity.[2][4]
It amplifies Mozilla and Creative Commons' advocacy for a user-centric web, seeding experiments that could scale micropayments globally, much like early internet grants bootstrapped key protocols.[1]
With funds disbursed over five years from 2019, Grant for the Web likely nears completion of major awards but could extend via successors like Interledger Foundation cohorts, focusing on sustained Web Monetization adoption. Upcoming trends—regulatory pushes for privacy (e.g., post-GDPR evolutions), AI-driven content, and blockchain micropayments—will shape it, potentially evolving into a standards body or ongoing incubator.[2][4] Its influence may grow by embedding open monetization in browsers and search tools, decentralizing creator revenue and reducing platform gatekeeping, tying back to its core mission of reimagining the web beyond ads.[1][3]