1 [[!meta title="Who are you helping when donating to Tails?"]]
2 [[!meta date="Thu Dec 24 12:34:56 2014"]]
5 Tails is being distributed free of charge because we strongly believe that
6 [free software is more secure by design](/doc/about/trust#free_software). But
7 also because we think that **nobody should have to pay to be safe while using
8 computers**. Unfortunately, Tails cannot stay alive without money as developing
9 Tails and maintaining our infrastructure [[has a cost|doc/about/finances]].
11 We rely solely on donations from individuals and supporting
12 organizations to keep Tails updated and getting always better.
13 **That's why we need your help!**
15 If you find Tails useful, please consider [[donating
16 money|contribute/how/donate]] or [[contributing some of your time and
17 skills|contribute]] to the project.
18 Donations to Tails are tax-deducible both in the US and in Europe.
20 In October 2014, Tails was being used by more than 11 500 people
21 [[daily|support/faq#boot_statistics]]. The profile of Tor and Tails
22 users is very diverse. This diversity increases the anonymity provided by
23 those tools for everyone by making it harder to target and to
24 identify a specific type of user. From the various contacts that we have
25 with organizations working on the ground, we know that Tails has been
28 - **Journalists wanting to protect themselves or their sources.**
30 - [Reporters Without Borders](https://rsf.org/) is an organization that promotes
31 and defends freedom of information, freedom of the press, and has
32 consultant status at the United Nations. RWB [advertises the use of
33 Tails](https://www.wefightcensorship.org/article/tails-amnesic-incognito-live-systemhtml.html)
34 for journalists to fight censorship and protect their sources.
35 RWB uses Tails in their training sessions world-wide.
37 - [According to Laura Poitras, Glen Greenwald, and Barton Gellman](https://pressfreedomfoundation.org/blog/2014/04/help-support-little-known-privacy-tool-has-been-critical-journalists-reporting-nsa),
38 Tails has been an essential tool to work on the Snowden documents and
39 report on the NSA spying. In a recent [article for The Intercept](https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2014/10/28/smuggling-snowden-secrets/),
40 Micah Lee gives many details on how Tails helped them starting to work together.
42 - [Fahad Desmukh](http://desmukh.com/), a freelance journalist based
43 in Pakistan who is also working for [Bytes for All](http://content.bytesforall.pk/) always has a Tails USB handy: "I can use it whenever I
44 may need to and I especially make sure to keep it with me when
45 travelling. Pakistan really isn't the safest place for journalists
46 so thanks to the Tails team for an amazing tool."
48 - [Jean-Marc Manach](http://jean-marc.manach.net/), a journalist
49 based in France and specialized in online privacy said that "war
50 reporters have to buy helmets, bullet-proof vests and rent armored
51 cars; journalists using the Internet for their investigations are
52 much luckier: to be as secured as war reporters, they only have to
53 download Tails, burn it on a CD, install it on a SD card, and
54 learn the basics of information and communication security, and
57 - **Human-right defenders organizing in repressive contexts.**
59 - Tails has been used in combination with [Martus](https://www.martus.org/), an information
60 system used to report on human rights abuses, to allow [Tibetan
61 communities in exile](http://benetech.org/2014/01/07/a-rat-in-the-registry-the-case-for-martus-on-tails/) to protect themselves from targeted malware attacks.
63 - **Democracy defenders facing dictatorships.**
65 - The [National Democratic Institute](https://www.ndi.org/), a Washington-based
66 democracy support organization that works in more than 70
67 countries around the world, has used Tails to [help human rights
68 defenders to communicate
69 securely](http://www.coe.int/en/web/world-forum-democracy/lab4_).
70 For instance, NDI used Tails to created a [data collection system in Belarus](http://cryptome.org/2014/07/tails-belarus-elections.pdf)
71 to help opposition forces to collect, store and manage voter information.
73 - **Citizens facing national emergencies.**
75 During the last years, we noticed that the use of Tor and Tails
76 systematically peaks when countries face national emergencies. Even
77 if Tails represents a small amount of the global Tor usage, it is
78 advertised by the Tor Project as the safest platform to protect from
81 - In [Starting a revolution with
82 technology](http://edition.cnn.com/2011/TECH/innovation/06/17/mesh.technology.revolution/),
83 Slim Amamou, Tunisian blogger and former Secretary of State for Sport
84 and Youth, explains that Tor "was vital to get information and share it"
85 during the Tunisian revolution of 2011, because social media pages sharing
86 information about the protests were "systematically censored so you could
87 not access them without censorship circumvention tools".
89 - Between January 25, the day the Egyptian Revolution of 2011 began,
90 and January 27 2011, the number of [Tor users in
91 Egypt](https://blog.torproject.org/blog/recent-events-egypt) was
92 multiplied at least by 4. On January 27, the Egyptian goverment
93 decided to halt Internet access accross the country.
95 - Between March 19 and March 31, the number of [Tor users in
96 Turkey](https://metrics.torproject.org/users.html?graph=userstats-relay-country&start=2014-03-01&end=2014-04-01&country=tr&events=off#userstats-relay-country)
98 as a direct response to the growing Internet censorship in the
99 country: on 20 March 2014, access to Twitter was blocked in
100 Turkey, and on 27 March 2014 access to YouTube was blocked.
102 - **Domestic violence survivors escaping from their abusers.**
104 - The Tor Project has been working with organizations fighting
105 against domestic violence such as [NNEDV](http://nnedv.org/), [Transition House](http://www.transitionhouse.org/), and
106 [Emerge](http://www.emergedv.com/) to help survivors escape digital surveillance from their
107 abuser and report on their situation. As [domestic abuse goes
108 digital](http://betaboston.com/news/2014/05/07/as-domestic-abuse-goes-digital-shelters-turn-to-counter-surveillance-with-tor/), circumvention tools like Tor and Tails end up as one of
111 If you know of other great stories of Tails users, please [[share them
112 with us|mailto:tails@boum.org]]!