We are actively seeking philanthropic partners, policy advisers, content creators, journalists, and institutional allies. If you believe this matters and have the resources, influence, or expertise to make a difference, we want to hear from you.
Whether you are a philanthropist looking to fund the most important cause of our time, a policy expert who wants to contribute expertise, a journalist covering AI safety, or simply someone who wants to help, send us a message. We read every one.
We typically respond within 48 hours. For urgent press enquiries, please indicate this in your subject line.
The Nakada Foundation is building a coalition across four dimensions. Every one of these is essential. If you can contribute in any of these areas, we want to hear from you.
The Nakada Foundation is in its earliest stage and has no endowment. Philanthropic funding is our most urgent need. We are seeking donors who understand that this cause requires urgency, independence, and scale. Funding will go to policy advocacy, coalition building, and cultural initiatives. We will publish all donations above a threshold of transparency we will set publicly. We do not accept funding from AI laboratories or their investors.
We are seeking advisers with expertise in international law, arms control, technology regulation, and legislative strategy. If you have worked in government, at international bodies such as the United Nations or IAEA, or in policy roles at technology companies, your expertise is directly relevant. The specific policy proposals we are advancing, including compute governance, international treaty frameworks, and AI liability, require legal and regulatory knowledge we are actively building.
We are seeking journalists who cover AI, technology, and existential risk; filmmakers, novelists, and artists who want to make this danger visceral and real; and public figures with platforms who are willing to speak about AI safety. The gap between what the scientific community knows and what the public understands is enormous. Closing that gap requires people with the ability to reach mass audiences and the courage to say something genuinely alarming.
We are seeking relationships with universities, think tanks, civil society organisations, faith institutions, and foundations that share our concern about AI existential risk. These partnerships serve multiple purposes: they amplify our message through established networks, they provide intellectual credibility, and they build the broad coalition that any successful advocacy movement requires. If your institution has already expressed concern about AI risk, we should be working together.
Join our mailing list. We send infrequent updates on our work, the science, and the policy landscape.