Home Grant Opportunities Grant Opportunities: 2023 Data Futures Lab Cohort Call for Proposals

Grant Opportunities: 2023 Data Futures Lab Cohort Call for Proposals

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Grant Opportunities: 2023 Data Futures Lab Cohort Call for Proposals

Deadline: 7-Nov-22

Mozilla is looking for organisations building alternative and openly-crowdsourced datasets and inviting them to join the Data Futures Lab.

The Data Futures Lab is interested in supporting organizations building technology platforms that mobilize communities to contribute their data for a shared benefit. Mozilla is seeking organizations applying this idea in any domain (health, transportation, labor rights, gig-work, research, consumer advocacy, and beyond). Mozilla is specifically interested in projects committed to implementing ethical and fair data collection, storage, and use towards solving a public interest problem.

Currently a handful of private companies manage and reap the benefits of the majority of the data we generate online. Countering this trend, some technology platforms have begun to build alternative ecosystems fostering community generated datasets seeking to open up data blackboxes, fill data voids, and create more value for society.

Funding Information
  • Among the list of top candidates, the Mozilla Foundation will choose and allocate awards of up to $100,000 USD each out of a total pool of $400,000 USD.
  • Mozilla will select 4 projects to receive individual awards of up to $100,000 USD, and access to a network of experts and peers. These projects will receive Mozilla’s support and accompaniment over a period of 12 months starting January 2023.
What Mozilla is offering
  • Tailored mentorship from Mozilla’s staff and current network of fellows, composed of subject matter experts on different aspects of data and technology across the globe.
  • Support in media and public relations efforts, by working with Mozilla’s communications team to position Mozilla’s grantees and their projects in its own and other relevant media outlets, including MozFest, Mozilla communications channels and social media.
  • Support in campaigns and calls for data contributors, leveraging Mozilla’s supporters base and its adjacent communities’ reach.
  • Facilitating synergies with Mozilla’s family of Internet products, including Firefox and Mozilla Rally, to conduct studies and deploy experiments.
  • Training on ethical frameworks for working with crowdsourced data, according to the project’s needs.
  • Membership in a cohort of up to four teams which are collectively working to address similar needs and solve similar challenges.
Eligible Projects

What types of projects are Mozilla interested in?

  • Platforms that allow users to upload their health, voice, shopping, environmental, financial or location data, to better generate insights that contribute towards addressing a larger societal issue, like Mozilla’s Common Voice.
  • Projects that engage users to donate data from their Internet-enabled devices to get insights and/or choose to participate in studies, or contribute to open datasets.
  • Initiatives that seek to involve underrepresented communities in generating datasets and making decisions about its access and sharing.
  • Projects like Mozilla’s Rally or RegretsReporter, where users contribute their browsing data for public interest research like promoting better transparency on otherwise opaque data ecosystems.
What Mozilla is looking for?

Mozilla will focus its support on projects which have existing communities of data contributors, or are able to demonstrate effective capacity to recruit them and reach critical mass within the next 12 months. At the geographic level, Mozilla will be seeking increased participation from Global South and projects led by historically underfunded communities and/or teams in the global majority.

Applicants must meet the following requirements:

  • Be a nonprofit, co-op, or other entity, developing a technology platform focused on solving a public interest problem or issue. Mozilla is especially interested in consumer & community technology platforms. For profit organizations like startups are welcome to apply, as long as their project has a charitable purpose.
  • Be legally able to receive funds in the form of grants from the Mozilla Foundation, a U.S. 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.
  • Be working towards solving a public interest problem or issue, providing value or deriving insights from data that directly benefit communities or groups of users.
  • Have launched a product or working prototype in hand–projects which have not moved beyond the idea stage will not be considered at this time.
  • Have a core team in place to support the development of the project.
  • Be able to articulate a list of project priorities or product milestones for the next twelve (12) months.

Mozilla is especially interested in projects that

  • Engage communities and users in collective decisions about the data they provide, exploring different governance models.
  • Work in the open, by establishing accountability or transparency mechanisms that aspire to share learnings and tools with the broader ecosystem.
Eligibility Criteria

These awards are open to all applicants regardless of geographic location or institutional affiliation, except where legally prohibited. However, Mozilla is especially interested in receiving applications from members of the global majority or Global South; ​​Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color; women, transgender and/or gender diverse applicants; migrant and diasporic communities; and/or persons coming from climate displaced/impacted communities, etc. Mozilla strongly encourages all such applicants to apply.

Evaluation criteria
  • Team. Who is in the team and how their backgrounds and experience can be leveraged in the project?
  • Innovation. How innovative is the solution proposed by the project from a technological, social or economic perspective?
  • Feasibility. How feasible are the goals proposed by the project under the period covered by the grant?
  • Impact. How relevant and urgent is the problem the project is working on? What is the public interest problem or issue your project is solving and who is being affected by it?
  • Sustainability. How is the project planning to sustain its operations and expansion beyond this grant?
  • Success and metrics. What does success look like for the project and which metrics are they using to measure it?

For more information, visit https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/data-futures-lab/grantmaking/2023-prototype-fund/

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