To make the connected world a safer place by developing, validating, and promoting timely best practice solutions that help people, businesses, and governments protect themselves against pervasive cyber threats.
Center for Internet Security Inc backs cyber defense work through unrestricted grants, and its recent awards show a clear preference for organizations that turn security ideas into practice. The largest grant in the current list went to Women in Cyber for $250,000 in 2025, a signal that workforce development sits alongside technical defense priorities. Two-year support for Global Cyber Alliance Inc, at $200,000 in 2024 and $200,000 in 2025, shows repeated backing for the same partner rather than one-off funding. The foundation also funded Secure the Village and the National Cybersecurity Center at $125,000 each, and it gave $100,000 to the National Fusion Center Association Incq, indicating interest in groups that work across community, institutional, and public-safety settings. Its mission is to make the connected world safer by developing, validating, and promoting best-practice solutions that help people, businesses, and governments protect themselves from cyber threats. The grant list aligns with that statement: practical, flexible support to organizations operating in cybersecurity, cyber defense, and related education and infrastructure work. With annual grants of $1,241,500 and assets of $99,160,529, the foundation operates at a meaningful but focused scale.
Cyber workforce development is one of the clearest themes in the grant list. Center for Internet Security Inc awarded $250,000 to Women in Cyber for unrestricted use, and its active Alan Paller Laureate Program is explicitly aimed at practical innovations that expand the pipeline of skilled cyber professionals and improve cyber defense education. The foundation also supports cyber defense organizations that work on coordination and public protection. It gave $200,000 to Global Cyber Alliance Inc in both 2024 and 2025, again for unrestricted use. Another $125,000 grant went to National Cybersecurity Center, showing support for entities focused on cyber defense capacity. A third pattern appears in grants tied to elections, civic security, and community protection. Center for Internet Security Inc awarded $30,000 to Brennan Center for Justice for unrestricted use, and it gave $25,000 to Secure Community Network Inc, which sits within the same broader public-safety orientation as the foundation’s focus on protecting governments and critical infrastructure.
$1.2M
$99.2M
$132.8M
$141M
Most grants fall between $25K and $125K, with a median of $84K.
25th Percentile
$25K
Median
$84K
75th Percentile
$125K
About 23% of grants go to recipients in DE.
JOHN GILLIGAN
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Grant sizes cluster around the middle tier. The typical award sits at a median of $84,000, with a lower quartile of $25,000 and an upper quartile of $125,000. Recent grants include both six-figure awards and smaller unrestricted gifts, suggesting a mix of anchor support and narrower program support. The list also shows repeated funding to the same recipient across years: Global Cyber Alliance Inc received grants in 2024 and 2025, and We the Veterans Foundation received two awards in the current period. The foundation is an operating nonprofit, not a grantmaker tied to individuals or program-related investments, and its active program, the Alan Paller Laureate Program, accepts unsolicited submissions.
Although headquartered in East Greenbush, New York, the foundation’s giving is national and reaches recipients in many states. By grant count, Delaware is the top state, with 23% of grants going to New York recipients. Recent awards landed in Cookeville, Tennessee; Los Angeles, California; Colorado Springs, Colorado; Alexandria, Virginia; Washington, DC; Chicago, Illinois; Lewes, Delaware; and Westminster, Maryland. Every listed grant went to a US recipient, with 13 grants in the country distribution.
The foundation funds organizations working on cybersecurity best practices, cyber defense and threat intelligence, critical infrastructure protection, SLTT government cybersecurity, elections infrastructure security, and workforce development and education. Recent grants also show support for unrestricted operating use, which suggests flexible support for organizations already active in those areas.
Yes. Its Alan Paller Laureate Program accepts unsolicited submissions and funds practical, measurable innovations that strengthen cyber defense, including security controls implementation, cyber professional pipeline development, and cyber defense education.
The grant-size distribution centers on a median award of $84,000, with a first quartile of $25,000 and a third quartile of $125,000. Recent awards include both smaller grants at $20,000 and $25,000 and larger awards at $200,000 and $250,000.
Yes. Global Cyber Alliance Inc received $200,000 in 2024 and another $200,000 in 2025. We the Veterans Foundation also appears twice in the recent list, with awards of $84,000 in 2024 and $32,500 in 2025.
Its grantmaking is national, with recipients in 13 US grants across the list. By state, Delaware is the top location by grant count, and New York recipients account for 23% of grants.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WOMEN IN CYBER | COOKEVILLE, TN | $250,000 | 2025 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| GLOBAL CYBER ALLIANCE INC | EAST GREENBUSH, NY | $200,000 | 2025 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| WE THE VETERANS FOUNDATION | WASHINGTON, DC | $32,500 | 2025 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| BRENNAN CENTER FOR JUSTICE | NEW YORK, NY | $30,000 | 2025 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| VETERANS FIGHTING FASCISM INC | LEWES, DE | $25,000 | 2025 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| GLOBAL CYBER ALLIANCE INC | EAST GREENBUSH, NY | $200,000 | 2024 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| NATIONAL CYBERSECURITY CENTER | COLORADO SPRING, CO | $125,000 | 2024 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| SECURE THE VILLAGE | LOS ANGELES, CA | $125,000 | 2024 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| NATIONAL FUSION CENTER ASSOCIATION INCQ | ALEXANDRIA, VA | $100,000 | 2024 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| WE THE VETERANS FOUNDATION | WASHINGTON, DC | $84,000 | 2024 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| SECURE COMMUNITY NETWORK INC | CHICAGO, IL | $25,000 | 2024 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| TASK FORCE BUTLER INSTITUTE | LEWES, DE | $25,000 | 2024 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
| CARROLL TECHNOLOGY COUNCIL INC | WESTMINSTER, MD | $20,000 | 2024 | FOR UNRESTRICTED USE |
WOMEN IN CYBER
$250,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
GLOBAL CYBER ALLIANCE INC
$200,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
WE THE VETERANS FOUNDATION
$32,500FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
BRENNAN CENTER FOR JUSTICE
$30,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
VETERANS FIGHTING FASCISM INC
$25,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
GLOBAL CYBER ALLIANCE INC
$200,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
NATIONAL CYBERSECURITY CENTER
$125,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
SECURE THE VILLAGE
$125,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
NATIONAL FUSION CENTER ASSOCIATION INCQ
$100,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
WE THE VETERANS FOUNDATION
$84,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
SECURE COMMUNITY NETWORK INC
$25,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
TASK FORCE BUTLER INSTITUTE
$25,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE
CARROLL TECHNOLOGY COUNCIL INC
$20,000FOR UNRESTRICTED USE