Access Now
Access Now is an international non-governmental organization founded in 2009 that defends and extends the digital rights of users and communities at risk worldwide.[1][2] Co-founded by Brett Solomon in response to the Iranian government's crackdown on post-election protests, the group focuses on the intersection of human rights and technology, emphasizing policy advocacy, technical assistance, and grassroots partnerships.[1][2] The organization operates globally with offices in the United States, Belgium, Costa Rica, and Tunisia, and teams across five continents, supporting initiatives such as the 24/7 Digital Security Helpline—which has handled over 10,000 cases since 2013—and the #KeepItOn coalition, which has documented and campaigned against internet shutdowns in dozens of countries, including 182 incidents across 34 nations in 2021.[1][3] Access Now also founded RightsCon, an annual summit on technology and human rights that drew over 9,000 participants from 162 countries in 2022, and administers grants totaling millions of dollars to local digital rights efforts.[1] While praised for its rapid-response emergency support in nine languages and advocacy for privacy standards like the GDPR, Access Now has faced scrutiny for affiliations with left-leaning advocacy groups and selective focus on certain geopolitical issues, reflecting broader patterns in NGO digital rights work.[4][5] Its efforts have contributed to empirical tracking of digital repression tactics, such as shutdowns used to evade accountability during political unrest, prioritizing data-driven responses over narrative-driven critiques.[6]History
Founding and Early Development
Access Now was founded in 2009 by Brett Solomon, Cameran Ashraf, Sina Rabbani, and Kim Pham, immediately following the Iranian government's widespread internet shutdowns in response to post-election protests after the disputed presidential vote on June 12, 2009.[7][1] The organization's inception stemmed from observations of technology's dual role in empowering activists—through tools like Twitter for real-time coordination—while exposing them to state-sponsored censorship, surveillance, and arrests, prompting the founders to assemble an ad hoc team of technologists for emergency digital support.[8][1] This crisis-driven origin emphasized practical interventions over abstract policy, prioritizing users' rights to online access amid authoritarian crackdowns.[5] In its formative phase from 2009 to 2011, Access Now operated primarily as a network bridging technologists, human rights defenders, and affected communities, offering circumvention tools, secure communication advice, and advocacy to mitigate shutdowns and enhance digital security for at-risk users.[1][8] The group expanded its scope beyond Iran by partnering with international civil society to document and challenge emerging patterns of digital repression, such as filtering and throttling, while building a volunteer base to scale responses.[7] This groundwork enabled early programmatic shifts, including the establishment of formal advisory services that evolved into broader campaigns.[1] A pivotal early milestone occurred in 2011 with the launch of the first RightsCon summit in Silicon Valley, California, which convened over 400 participants from technology, activism, and policy sectors to strategize on defending digital rights globally.[1] This event marked Access Now's transition from reactive crisis response to proactive coalition-building, fostering collaborations that addressed systemic threats like surveillance and access barriers, and setting the stage for institutionalized programs.[1] By 2012, these efforts had solidified the organization's reputation as a defender of internet freedom, with initial funding supporting operational growth amid rising global incidents of digital censorship.[5]Expansion and Key Milestones (2009–2020)
In the years following its founding in July 2009 as an emergency response to internet censorship during Iran's Green Movement protests, Access Now transitioned from a small team of technologists providing ad hoc support for online access and secure communications to a structured nonprofit with formalized programs and international reach.[1] By 2011, the organization had established itself sufficiently to launch the inaugural RightsCon Summit in Silicon Valley, California, convening technologists, activists, policymakers, and civil society to address emerging digital rights challenges, marking the beginning of an annual global series that grew to attract thousands of participants.[1] Expansion accelerated through the mid-2010s with the development of core services and regional infrastructure. In 2013, Access Now publicly launched its Digital Security Helpline, offering 24/7 rapid-response assistance and personalized guidance on threats like surveillance and data breaches, which by 2020 had handled over 10,000 cases across multiple languages.[1] [9] The organization opened registered offices in key locations, including Brussels, Belgium; San José, Costa Rica; and Tunis, Tunisia, alongside its U.S. headquarters in New York, enabling coverage of Africa, Asia-Pacific, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, and North Africa.[1] This global footprint supported advocacy efforts, such as annual reports documenting internet shutdowns, which highlighted over 200 such incidents worldwide by the late 2010s.[10] Further milestones included the 2015 initiation of the Access Now Grants Program, which by the end of the decade had disbursed millions to support grassroots digital rights initiatives in over 50 countries, fostering local capacity amid rising authoritarian controls.[1] In June 2016, at RightsCon Silicon Valley, Access Now launched the #KeepItOn campaign, a coalition effort uniting more than 345 organizations from 106 countries by 2020 to oppose internet shutdowns through advocacy, research, and public mobilization.[11] [1] These developments culminated in organizational growth to over 130 staff members across five continents by 2020, positioning Access Now as a leading defender of digital civil liberties amid escalating global threats like state-sponsored surveillance and platform moderation disputes.[1]Recent Developments (2021–Present)
In 2021, Access Now's #KeepItOn campaign documented 182 internet shutdowns across 34 countries, highlighting a resurgence of digital authoritarianism amid elections and protests, with the organization launching an Election Watch initiative to monitor high-risk periods.[3] [12] This marked a continuation of efforts to track and oppose shutdowns through the Shutdown Tracker Optimization Project (STOP), in collaboration with global partners.[10] The trend escalated in subsequent years, with 187 shutdowns recorded in 35 countries in 2022, including prolonged restrictions in India, which accounted for nearly half of global incidents.[13] By 2023, shutdowns reached 283 in 39 countries—a 51% increase from 2021—driven primarily by conflicts and violence in regions like Palestine, Myanmar, Sudan, and Ukraine, rather than elections.[14] Access Now attributed this shift to governments using shutdowns to obscure atrocities and suppress documentation, issuing calls for international accountability.[15] In 2024, the organization reported a record 296 shutdowns in 54 countries, surpassing prior years, with Africa experiencing heightened use of prolonged blackouts—some exceeding one year—to weaponize access during unrest.[16] [17] Access Now intensified advocacy, including monitoring 2024 elections in nations like Tanzania and Cameroon for potential disruptions, and urging restoration of access in cases such as Sudan's WhatsApp block and Cameroon's pre-election threats.[18] Parallel to these efforts, Access Now hosted RightsCon summits annually, adapting to hybrid formats post-2021 before returning to in-person events; the 2025 edition occurred in Taipei, Taiwan, from February 24–27, marking the first time in the region and focusing on digital rights amid geopolitical tensions.[19] The organization also contributed to the 2025 Ranking Digital Rights (RDR) Index, evaluating 14 major tech companies on human rights performance, where none exceeded a score of 50 out of 100, prompting recommendations for improved transparency and accountability.[20] Ongoing policy advocacy included critiques of tech firms' roles in conflicts, such as demands for Microsoft to disclose involvement in Israel's Gaza operations in October 2025, and calls to end Afghanistan's nationwide blackout under Taliban rule in the same year.[21] These initiatives underscored Access Now's expansion of direct support and coalition-building, with financials reflecting growth: $14.4 million in income against $10.2 million in expenses for 2021.[5]Organizational Structure
Mission, Vision, and Core Principles
Access Now's mission is to defend and extend the digital rights of people and communities at risk around the world by combining direct technical support, strategic advocacy, grassroots partnerships, and targeted litigation to ensure that digital technologies enhance rather than undermine fundamental rights.[1] This focus emerged from its origins in 2009 as an emergency response initiative during the Iranian Green Movement protests, where it provided technologists to assist activists in maintaining online access and security amid government crackdowns.[1] The organization's vision centers on empowering individuals to maintain control over their personal information and digital identities in increasingly data-driven economies, while preserving spaces for civil society and bolstering inclusive democratic processes through rights-respecting technological frameworks.[1] This entails advocating for policies and practices that prioritize human rights in the development and deployment of emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence and digital infrastructure, to mitigate risks like surveillance and exclusion.[22] Core principles guiding Access Now's operations include a commitment to universality and inalienability of human rights, applying equally to all individuals regardless of context, with emphasis on key digital rights: privacy, freedom of expression, association, opinion, and access to information.[23] These principles underpin an intersectional approach that addresses compounded vulnerabilities faced by marginalized groups, promoting transparency and accountability in technology governance through collaborations with civil society, policymakers, and private sector entities.[1] The organization also adheres to operational standards like financial transparency via independent audits and a human rights-centered methodology in programs such as emergency digital security assistance and anti-censorship campaigns.[1]Leadership and Governance
Access Now's governance is overseen by a board of directors composed of international experts in digital rights, technology, and policy, responsible for providing high-level strategic guidance, oversight of the organization's vision and mission, and ensuring adherence to ethical standards such as conflict-of-interest policies and a code of conduct.[1] The board does not dictate day-to-day operations or specific policy positions, which are handled by executive staff. As of 2024, the board is led by chair Andrew McLaughlin, with members including Arzu Geybulla, Bruce Schneier, Donna McKay, Andrew Cohen, and Ronaldo Lemos, among others selected for their expertise in human rights advocacy and tech governance.[24] [25] The executive director serves as the chief executive officer, managing operational implementation, fundraising, and global team coordination across Access Now's offices in the United States, Belgium, Costa Rica, and Tunisia, as well as regional presences supporting over 130 staff members.[1] Alejandro Mayoral Baños assumed the role on July 18, 2024, succeeding co-founder Brett Solomon, who led the organization from its 2009 inception through February 2024, during which time he also served as a board member and secretary while expanding initiatives like the #KeepItOn campaign and RightsCon summits.[26] [24] Solomon's tenure emphasized grassroots advocacy and technical support for at-risk users, growing Access Now into a key player in countering internet shutdowns and surveillance.[1] Senior leadership includes specialized directors such as Carolyn Tackett, Campaigns & Rapid Response Director, who coordinates advocacy efforts, and Raman Jit Singh Chima, Asia Pacific Policy Director and Senior International Counsel, focusing on regional policy threats like censorship.[27] [28] As a U.S.-registered 501(c)(3) non-profit, Access Now maintains transparency through annual IRS Form 990 filings, which detail governance practices including board review processes for financials and operations.[29]Global Presence and Operations
Access Now operates as an international non-governmental organization with registered offices in Belgium, Costa Rica, Tunisia, and the United States.[1] It maintains operational presences in key cities such as New York (United States), San José (Costa Rica), Brussels (Belgium), Berlin (Germany), Tunis (Tunisia), Delhi (India), Nairobi (Kenya), and Manila (Philippines).[1] These locations position the organization in hubs of political influence, technological development, and civil society engagement across five continents. The organization employs over 130 team members, forming a diverse international staff that supports global digital rights efforts through regionally tailored advocacy, technical assistance, and policy work.[1] Operations are organized via dedicated regional centers addressing Africa, Asia Pacific, Central Asia and Eastern Europe, Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Middle East and North Africa, and North America.[1] This structure enables context-specific responses, such as countering internet shutdowns in regions prone to government censorship or aiding activists in high-risk environments. Access Now's global operations emphasize rapid-response mechanisms, including its Digital Security Helpline, which delivers emergency assistance in nine languages to users worldwide, enhancing digital security for at-risk individuals and communities regardless of geography.[1] The organization's transnational approach also involves coordinating coalitions like #KeepItOn, which mobilizes international pressure against network disruptions in over 20 countries annually, drawing on staff expertise from multiple regions to amplify local advocacy.[1]Key Programs
RightsCon Summit
RightsCon Summit, organized annually by Access Now, serves as the premier global convening on human rights in the digital age, gathering business leaders, policymakers, technologists, academics, journalists, and activists to address intersections of technology and rights.[30] Launched in 2011 in Silicon Valley, California, the event originated with over 400 participants focused on fostering collaboration amid emerging digital threats to freedoms.[31] It has since expanded into a multi-stakeholder platform emphasizing actionable strategies for an open internet, including the 2016 inception of the #KeepItOn coalition against internet shutdowns during that year's Manila edition.[1] The summit rotates locations to reflect regional priorities, hosting in-person gatherings supplemented by online access since adopting hybrid formats. Past venues include Rio de Janeiro (2012), Brussels (2014), Toronto (2018), and Tunis (2019), with recent editions in San José, Costa Rica (2023) and Taipei, Taiwan (February 24–27, 2025), drawing record in-person attendance of 3,249.[30] [32] Growth in scale is evident: the 2021 online summit attracted 9,212 registrants from 164 countries, while 2022 saw 9,329 from 162 countries across 560 sessions.[33] [1] The upcoming 14th edition is scheduled for May 5–8, 2026, in Lusaka, Zambia.[34] Programming relies on community-submitted proposals, featuring diverse formats such as fireside chats, workshops, roundtables, private meetings, and tech demonstrations to facilitate dialogue and coalition-building.[35] An exhibition space showcases tools and innovations supporting digital rights.[30] Outcomes reports highlight tangible advancements, like policy recommendations and networked advocacy efforts, underscoring RightsCon's role in Access Now's broader mission of direct support and strategic campaigning.[36]#KeepItOn Campaign
The #KeepItOn campaign, initiated by Access Now in 2016, seeks to coordinate global civil society efforts to combat internet shutdowns imposed by governments, which restrict access to online communication during periods of unrest, elections, or other sensitive events.[10] The campaign emphasizes advocacy, documentation, and coalition-building to highlight the human rights violations inherent in such shutdowns, including infringements on freedom of expression and assembly.[37] By 2025, it had expanded into a coalition involving over 300 organizations from more than 100 countries, focusing on monitoring, reporting, and pressuring authorities to maintain connectivity.[16] Central to the campaign's operations is the annual tracking and publication of internet shutdown incidents, which provide empirical data on the scale and patterns of disruptions. For instance, the 2023 report documented 283 shutdowns across 39 countries, marking the highest recorded since the campaign's inception, often linked to conflicts, protests, or electoral processes.[14] This rose to 296 shutdowns in 54 countries in 2024, with notable concentrations in regions like sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, where shutdowns lasted weeks or months, exacerbating economic losses estimated in billions of dollars globally.[38] These reports, co-produced with coalition partners, rely on verified incidents from on-the-ground activists and open-source intelligence, though critics have noted potential undercounting in opaque regimes due to limited access.[39] The campaign conducts targeted advocacy, including preemptive "election watches" to deter shutdowns during voting periods. In 2023, it monitored high-risk elections in countries with shutdown histories, engaging officials and telecom operators to commit to uninterrupted access; similar efforts in 2024 and 2025 covered 12 nations, such as those with documented past blackouts during polls.[40] [41] It has also launched urgent responses to prolonged outages, such as a 2025 push against a multi-year shutdown in Equatorial Guinea's Annobón island, rallying international pressure for restoration.[42] These actions prioritize evidence-based appeals to bodies like the United Nations and regional human rights mechanisms, aiming to establish norms against shutdowns as tools of censorship.[10] While the campaign's documentation has raised global awareness—evidenced by citations in policy discussions and media—the persistence of rising shutdown numbers suggests limited direct prevention success, attributable to entrenched state interests in information control during crises.[13] Nonetheless, it has facilitated grassroots storytelling from affected communities, amplifying personal impacts like disrupted education and healthcare access during blackouts.[43]Digital Security Helpline
The Digital Security Helpline is a 24/7 rapid-response service operated by Access Now, formally established in 2013 as a dedicated computer security incident response team (CSIRT) to provide free technical assistance to at-risk users worldwide.[44][45] It focuses on supporting activists, journalists, human rights defenders, independent media, and civil society organizations facing digital threats, including hacking attempts, surveillance, phishing, malware infections, and content takedowns.[9][46] Services encompass both emergency incident response—such as mitigating active compromises and recovering compromised accounts—and proactive guidance on secure practices, including encrypted communications, device hardening, data protection, and safe online behavior.[47] Assistance is delivered through multiple channels, including a toll-free hotline (+1 888-414-0100), email, and secure platforms, with support available in languages such as English, Spanish, Arabic, French, Russian, and others to accommodate global users.[48][49] The helpline emphasizes tailored advice based on the user's threat model, prioritizing high-risk cases while maintaining confidentiality and avoiding law enforcement referrals unless explicitly requested by the user.[44] By June 2021, the helpline had handled over 10,000 cases across more than 150 countries, revealing patterns such as prevalent phishing attacks (affecting 40% of cases) and account compromises, with a notable rise in state-sponsored threats targeting human rights advocates.[46] In 2023 alone, it assisted over 3,000 civil society members in enhancing their online safety amid escalating digital risks.[47] These efforts have contributed to broader digital resilience, though resource constraints from funding fluctuations have periodically strained capacity, as noted in organizational reports on U.S. aid reductions impacting civil society support.[50]Access Now Grants
Access Now Grants is a funding initiative that delivers flexible, grantee-led financial support to grassroots organizations, frontline activists, and individuals combating digital rights threats and advancing human rights online.[51] The program prioritizes entities in high-risk environments, including those addressing surveillance, censorship, internet shutdowns, and gendered digital violence, with a focus on the Global South and marginalized communities.[52][53] Initiated in late 2015 with seed funding from the Swedish International Development Agency, the program fully commenced in January 2016 as an extension of prior digital security efforts, aiming to resource civil society actors defending user rights amid repression.[52] By 2023, marking its ninth year, it had distributed grants emphasizing core operational needs, project-specific work, and rapid-response discretionary aid, with 60% of recipients securing funding for three or more years.[51] That year, Access Now allocated just under $1.7 million USD across 66 grants to 63 organizations and individuals in about 30 countries, 71% of which operated in "not free" nations per Freedom House evaluations.[51][54] Support targets small-scale entities, where 70% maintain annual budgets below $200,000, including 34% first-time grantees in prior cycles like 2021, when $1.41 million funded 51 grants to 46 recipients across 29 countries—53% in "not free" settings.[53][54] Regional examples encompass crisis responses in Palestine (Gaza documentation and security), Myanmar (coup-related safety measures), Ukraine (ongoing conflict threats), Sudan (violence amid unrest), Ethiopia (surveillance exposure), and expansions into Libya, Iraq, Thailand, and Senegal.[51][53] Approximately 25% of 2023 grants advanced gender and sexuality rights initiatives, alongside policy solutions, awareness campaigns, and violation tracking.[51] Outcomes include bolstered community mobilization, enhanced digital security for defenders, and amplified evidence of abuses, enabling sustained advocacy against authoritarian controls and tech-enabled harms without rigid reporting strings that could hinder frontline work.[53][51] The program's grantee-driven model contrasts with donor-imposed frameworks, fostering autonomy for recipients confronting immediate perils like Pegasus spyware or disinformation in Venezuela and Honduras.[53]Advocacy and Policy Work
Positions on Internet Shutdowns and Censorship
Access Now has consistently advocated against internet shutdowns since launching the #KeepItOn campaign in 2016, framing them as deliberate disruptions that violate fundamental human rights, including freedoms of expression and assembly.[10] The organization documents these events annually through collaborative reports with the #KeepItOn coalition, recording 296 shutdowns across 54 countries in 2024—exceeding the 2023 figure of 283 in 39 countries—and attributes them primarily to government efforts to suppress protests, control information during elections, and stifle dissent amid political instability.[38] Access Now argues that such measures exacerbate violence, hinder economic activity, and undermine democratic processes, as evidenced by their analysis of shutdowns coinciding with national events like military coups and elections.[14] In response, Access Now promotes circumvention tools, policy advocacy, and international pressure on governments and telecom providers to prevent shutdowns, including through election-specific monitoring like the 2024 Elections Watch initiative targeting high-risk countries.[18] They classify shutdowns into categories such as full blackouts, throttling, and domain blocks, providing taxonomies and handbooks to aid documentation and resilience-building among affected communities.[55] [56] On censorship, Access Now defends broad freedom of expression online, opposing state-imposed content filtering and blocks that restrict access to information, as seen in their condemnation of measures in countries like India, Tanzania, and Saudi Arabia.[57] [58] [59] The group critiques both governmental overreach—such as executive orders blocking vast online content spectra—and private sector practices, including Meta's alleged systematic suppression of pro-Palestinian voices, which they document as amplifying hate and silencing advocacy amid conflicts like Gaza in 2023-2024.[60] [61] Access Now advocates for "rights-respecting" content governance frameworks that address illegal content without broad censorship, urging governments and platforms to prioritize transparency and proportionality in moderation.[62] They support civil society efforts to reclaim expression rights, warning against laws that extraterritorially enforce domestic speech restrictions or enable surveillance under censorship pretexts.[63] [64] This stance aligns with their broader digital rights mission but has drawn scrutiny for selective emphasis on certain censorship cases, potentially reflecting advocacy priorities over uniform application.[65]Engagement with Governments and Tech Companies
Access Now engages governments through strategic advocacy to promote digital rights, particularly opposing internet shutdowns and surveillance practices. In the #KeepItOn campaign, the organization collaborates with governments and regional bodies to advocate against shutdowns, documenting over 100 instances annually and urging policy reforms, such as during elections in countries like India and Ethiopia.[10] It has co-led the Tech for Democracy cohort at the U.S.-hosted Summit for Democracy since 2022, partnering with the governments of Canada and Denmark to integrate human rights into tech policy frameworks amid democratic backsliding.[66] Additionally, Access Now provides governments with toolkits and recommendations, including a 2024 guide on human rights-centered digital public infrastructure to mitigate risks in identity systems, and 2020 advice on balancing misinformation controls with free expression during the COVID-19 pandemic.[67][68] The organization also interacts with tech companies via multi-stakeholder initiatives aimed at influencing content moderation and privacy practices. In 2022, Access Now issued a content governance declaration for social media platforms during crises, outlining principles to protect human rights while addressing harms like election interference.[69] Its 2020 report offered 26 recommendations to company leaders on content governance processes, emphasizing transparency and rights impact assessments over opaque algorithmic decisions.[70] Access Now critiques private sector dominance in humanitarian tech, as detailed in a 2024 mapping report based on 45 expert interviews, which highlights risks of data consolidation by firms like Microsoft and calls for ethical partnerships with aid actors to prevent surveillance and exclusion of vulnerable populations.[71][72] These engagements often occur through coalitions, such as advocacy for "trustworthy AI" registers involving tech firms and regulators, though Access Now maintains independence by prioritizing civil society perspectives over corporate self-regulation.[73] While effective in raising awareness—evidenced by policy citations in UN human rights reviews—the approach has drawn scrutiny for potentially amplifying NGO influence without corresponding accountability to affected users in authoritarian contexts.[74]Reports and Research Outputs
Access Now produces reports and research outputs primarily aimed at documenting threats to digital rights, including internet shutdowns, corporate transparency, artificial intelligence governance, and platform accountability. These materials draw on data collected through partnerships and tools like the Shutdown Tracker Optimization Project (STOP), which verifies shutdown events using multi-source evidence such as news reports, partner inputs, and technical indicators.[75] Outputs often include annual summaries, policy briefs, and regulatory mappings to support advocacy against censorship and surveillance.[76] The organization's flagship research on internet shutdowns is published via the #KeepItOn campaign. The 2023 report, released on May 15, 2024, documented 283 verified shutdowns across 39 countries, marking the highest annual total since tracking began in 2016 and highlighting patterns in regions like Africa and the Middle East where shutdowns coincided with elections or conflicts.[14] The 2024 annual report, issued February 8, 2025, continued this analysis, noting persistent use of shutdowns to suppress dissent, with data sourced from over 258 partner organizations in 106 countries.[16] These reports quantify economic costs, such as billions in lost productivity, and recommend technical and policy measures to mitigate shutdowns.[10] Another key output is the Transparency Reporting Index (TRI), launched in 2014 and updated periodically, which compiles and evaluates transparency reports from major internet and telecommunications companies on government requests for user data, content removals, and surveillance disclosures.[77] By January 30, 2025, marking its tenth anniversary, the TRI had been revamped to address evolving practices, assessing over 20 companies against criteria like report frequency, data granularity, and human rights considerations.[78] The index reveals gaps, such as inconsistent reporting on national security requests, and advocates for standardized metrics to enhance accountability.[79] Access Now also issues targeted research on emerging technologies. The "Regulatory Mapping on Artificial Intelligence in Latin America" report, based on input from legal experts via Thomson Reuters Foundation's TrustLaw network, surveys national AI policies and identifies human rights risks like biased algorithms and inadequate oversight.[80] In 2025, submissions to UN bodies on AI governance emphasized inclusive stakeholder input and reporting mechanisms for scientific panels.[81] Additional briefs cover data protection frameworks in Africa and platform governance during crises, proposing rule-of-law checklists to balance regulation with rights protections.[76] These works, while advocacy-oriented, rely on empirical data and legal analysis, though their focus on harms may underemphasize countervailing security rationales cited by governments.[74]Impact and Evaluation
Documented Achievements and Metrics
Access Now's #KeepItOn campaign, launched in 2016, has coordinated a global coalition exceeding 300 civil society organizations to document and oppose internet shutdowns, verifying 296 such incidents across 54 countries in 2024—the highest annual figure since tracking began—enabling targeted advocacy and policy interventions.[38][82] The Digital Security Helpline, operational since 2013, handled 3,709 requests for assistance in 2023, delivering rapid-response technical support, trainings, and resources to journalists, activists, and human rights defenders facing digital threats.[83] RightsCon summits, organized annually by Access Now, achieved record in-person attendance of 3,249 participants in 2025 in Taipei, marking a 13% increase from 2023 levels and facilitating over 300 sessions on digital rights strategies.[36] Access Now Grants distributed approximately $1.7 million USD in 2023 to fund digital security tools, advocacy projects, and capacity-building for grassroots activists in over 50 countries, enhancing local responses to censorship and surveillance.[84]Empirical Assessments of Effectiveness
Independent evaluations of Access Now's effectiveness are limited, with most available data derived from the organization's own reports and metrics, which lack rigorous causal analysis or third-party verification. Self-reported indicators, such as case volumes and documentation efforts, provide descriptive insights but do not conclusively demonstrate attribution of outcomes to interventions, a common challenge in advocacy work where confounding variables like geopolitical pressures dominate.[14][46] The #KeepItOn campaign, launched in 2016 to combat internet shutdowns, has tracked a persistent upward trend in such incidents despite advocacy efforts. Access Now documented 283 shutdowns across 39 countries in 2023, marking a 41% increase from 2022 and the highest annual figure since systematic tracking began in 2016; conflicts were cited as the primary driver, with shutdowns often justified by governments on security grounds. While the campaign has mobilized coalitions and raised awareness—evidenced by partnerships with over 300 organizations—no empirical data isolates prevented shutdowns or quantifies policy reversals directly attributable to #KeepItOn interventions, amid criticisms that global shutdowns continue unabated due to entrenched state interests.[14][85][86] Access Now's Digital Security Helpline, operational since 2016, offers a more quantifiable metric through case handling: by June 2021, it had addressed 10,000 incidents for at-risk civil society, journalists, and activists, with over 3,000 additional cases in 2023 alone, 82% of which were reactive responses to immediate threats like hacking or surveillance. The service provides technical guidance on encryption, secure communications, and threat mitigation, but effectiveness remains unmeasured in terms of resolution rates, harm averted, or long-term security improvements; reports emphasize volume and reach rather than controlled outcomes, with no independent audits confirming sustained impact on users' digital safety.[46][87][83] Broader advocacy and policy efforts, including submissions to frameworks like the EU's Digital Services Act and AI governance discussions, have influenced discourse on rights-respecting tech policy, as noted in collaborative reports with entities like Chatham House. However, causal evidence linking Access Now's inputs to enacted changes—such as reduced censorship or enhanced privacy standards—is anecdotal, with external analyses highlighting persistent gaps in enforcement and rising digital threats despite such engagements. Funding-dependent metrics, like grants awarded, further complicate assessments, as recipient project outcomes are rarely tracked longitudinally or independently.[88][89] Overall, while Access Now's work correlates with heightened visibility of digital rights issues, empirical demonstrations of scalable, attributable effectiveness are constrained by the absence of randomized or comparative studies, reflecting systemic difficulties in evaluating non-profit advocacy amid complex, multi-actor dynamics.[90][4]Criticisms, Controversies, and Counterarguments
Access Now has faced scrutiny over potential biases introduced by its funding sources, which include significant contributions from the Open Society Foundations—totaling $3,503,927 over five years, with $700,000 in 2023—and the Ford Foundation, providing $1,775,000 over the same period, including $775,000 in 2023.[91] These donors, known for supporting progressive causes and organizations critical of certain national policies (e.g., Israel's digital security measures), have led critics to question whether Access Now's advocacy selectively emphasizes issues aligned with donor priorities, such as campaigns against perceived "digital occupation" by Israel or amplified focus on content moderation favoring Palestinian narratives on platforms like Meta.[5] [92] Further concerns arise from Access Now's receipt of funding from tech companies it simultaneously critiques, including Meta and Google, creating apparent conflicts of interest in its policy advocacy and research outputs on data practices and censorship.[4] For instance, in 2023, Access Now's Digital Security Helpline contributed to advisories prompting Apple to issue threat alerts to Indian politicians and journalists on October 31, claiming state-sponsored spyware risks; however, Apple later described such notifications as unreliable, prompting accusations that Access Now's involvement may exaggerate threats to advance anti-government narratives, potentially influenced by donors like the Open Society Foundations with histories of funding India-critical initiatives.[91][93] Critics also highlight partnerships with groups like 7amleh, which NGO watchdogs describe as advancing partisan agendas in the Israel-Palestine context, suggesting Access Now's collaborations may undermine its claim to neutral, evidence-based digital rights defense.[92] Despite documenting over 1,000 internet shutdowns since 2016 through its #KeepItOn campaign, skeptics argue Access Now's advocacy has failed to empirically reduce such incidents, which rose to 221 in 2022 amid ongoing global escalations, indicating limited causal impact beyond awareness-raising.[94] In response, Access Now emphasizes its financial independence through a diversified donor base—including governments like Sweden's SIDA ($2.4 million in 2023)—and transparent annual reporting, asserting that funding supports universal digital rights without compromising objectivity, as evidenced by critiques of shutdowns across ideologically varied regimes from India to Myanmar.[91] Supporters counter that donor scrutiny reflects broader political pushback against NGOs challenging state or corporate power, with Access Now's metrics—such as policy reversals in countries like Togo (2017) and Sudan (2019)—demonstrating tangible successes unattributable to bias.[94] These defenses maintain that empirical focus on verifiable shutdown data and helpline interventions prioritizes causal evidence over donor agendas.Funding and Financial Transparency
Primary Funding Sources
Access Now's primary funding derives from philanthropic foundations and international development agencies, which together form the majority of its support for programmatic work and operations. Contributions from these sources accounted for over 99% of the organization's total revenue in fiscal years 2020–2023, with annual revenues ranging from $9.8 million in 2020 to nearly $15 million in 2023.[95][96] Prominent foundation donors include the Open Society Foundations, which granted $1,200,000 in October 2024 and $1,425,000 in prior support; the Ford Foundation; the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation; the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation; Luminate; and the Oak Foundation.[96][5] Government funding primarily flows through development agencies, such as Global Affairs Canada ($287,179 in July 2025), the German Federal Foreign Office, the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, and agencies from Switzerland, Sweden, the Netherlands, and Finland.[96][5] Corporate contributions, comprising less than 17% of programming funds, are provided by technology firms including Apple ($275,000 in July 2025), Google, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, and NordVPN, alongside smaller inputs from individuals, civil society, and events like RightsCon ticket sales ($291,923 in March 2025).[96][97]Donor Influences and Potential Biases
Access Now's funding includes contributions from various foundations, bilateral government agencies, and corporations, with foundations and development agencies comprising the majority of support. Specific donors reported include the Ford Foundation, Open Society Foundations, and Tides Foundation, alongside governments of Germany, Switzerland, Sweden, Canada, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Finland.[5] These sources often prioritize human rights and digital policy aligned with Western liberal democratic values, potentially shaping the organization's focus on issues like government surveillance and internet access in authoritarian contexts over domestic Western policy critiques.[5] The organization has also received grants from technology firms such as Meta (formerly Facebook) and Google, entities it has simultaneously criticized for expansive data collection and privacy erosions.[4] This dual relationship highlights a potential conflict, as corporate funding could incentivize moderated advocacy against Big Tech practices to preserve donor ties, though Access Now maintains that such contributions do not dictate its positions.[97] Access Now publicly commits to rejecting funding that risks compromising independence, emphasizing donor agreements that prohibit influence over priorities or policy.[97] Nonetheless, concentration among progressive-leaning foundations like the Open Society Foundations—associated with funding for open borders, anti-nationalist causes, and critiques of traditional institutions—may foster an ideological tilt in digital rights framing, favoring narratives that align with internationalist rather than sovereignty-focused perspectives on censorship and data governance.[5] No verified instances of direct donor-driven policy shifts have surfaced in audited financials or independent analyses, but the donor profile mirrors patterns in NGO sectors where foundation grants correlate with amplified attention to select global risks over balanced scrutiny.[98]Financial Reporting and Accountability
Access Now publishes independently audited combined financial statements for its U.S. entity and Access Now Europe annually on its website, typically in November following the fiscal year-end of December 31.[96] These statements, prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, detail revenue recognition policies, including contributions received upon notification and satisfaction of conditions, with conditional grants recorded as refundable advances.[98] The organization also files and discloses IRS Form 990 returns publicly, providing breakdowns of revenue, expenses, executive compensation, and grant expenditures, as required for U.S. 501(c)(3) nonprofits.[96] The financial statements are audited by GRF CPAs & Advisors, an independent firm based in Bethesda, Maryland, which issues unqualified opinions on the fairness of presentation.[98][99] Accountability mechanisms include board oversight of finances, periodic narrative and financial reporting to grantors on funded activities, and maintenance of internal controls to prevent material misstatements.[29] Access Now states that transparency informs its internal operations and policy advocacy, with no reported instances of financial irregularities or disputes over audit findings in public records.[97] Key financial metrics from recent audited statements are summarized below:| Metric | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Revenue | $15,612,301 | $15,786,154 | $15,215,308 |
| Total Expenses | $18,531,517 | $13,642,814 | $11,091,842 |
| Net Assets | $7,233,993 | $10,153,209 | $8,009,869 |