Building the sovereign, open-source digital infrastructure needed to protect crisis-affected people and power trusted humanitarian action
The problem
Crisis-affected people increasingly depend on digital tools to access information and aid, but these systems often put them at risk.
They are fragmented, costly, and dependent on opaque vendors, exposing people to data misuse, exclusion, and loss of access to essential services.
The solution
A sovereign, open-source humanitarian technology commons that ensures independence and enables crisis-affected people to safely access trusted information and services free of charge, while helping organisations reduce duplication, lower costs, and work more effectively together.
Why now?
Crisis-affected populations face growing digital risks while humanitarian actors remain locked in costly duplication cycles, and no trusted global humanitarian digital commons exists today.
The transition to sovereign, open infrastructure creates a narrow but critical window. Donor support in 2026 will enable seamless infrastructure migration, open-source release with adequate governance, and the scaling of a proven platform into a global Digital Public Good.
New Models of Cooperation
Technological Independence
Swiss Ecosystem

How can you help
We are seeking CHF 1.5 million to launch operations and complete the transition of RedSafe from the ICRC to an independent, Swiss-hosted platform. Your contribution will directly fund:
- Technology Transition
- Open-source release
- Operational setup
- Strategic partnershios
- Product expansion
Get involved
Beyond funding, we welcome technical expertise, legal and administrative support, strategic introductions, and in-kind donations.
We invite partners to help build and scale a trusted humanitarian digital commons.