SWDetroit.info is a community-driven platform that connects residents with local resources, events, and services in Southwest Detroit. It provides real-time information about community initiatives, volunteer opportunities, and neighborhood news, with the goal of strengthening community engagement and improving access to essential needs in the area.
The app was launched as a rapid response project with the goal of facilitating the flow of resources bidirectionally in the local community to provide more efficient relief to the flooding crisis that impacted the Southwest Detroit neighborhood in February 2025.
We provide a lightweight external security audit – no backend credentials required – to help you spot the most common risks that leave small organizations vulnerable.
What you get: a report with screenshots, evidence, and clear explanations, a prioritized list of recommended fixes and quick wins your web admin or developer can apply immediately.
Ideal for WordPress, Squarespace, and small custom sites
Starting at
$150
We check for:
exposed accounts and API keys
weak endpoints
surface-level vulnerabilities linked to malware injection phishing, brute force attacks, and DoS risks
data tied to known leaks
exposure to common web exploits including SQL injection and cross-site scripting
Get an affordable, human-centered accessibility audit designed for small organizations. Our audits focus on identifying common issues that impact people with disabilities and expose your organization to legal and reputational risk.
What you get: a report with examples and evidence and a prioritized roadmap for implementation.
Ideal for WordPress, Squarespace, and small custom sites
Keep your site content fresh without hiring a full-time web team. We provide content management services with fast turnaround tailored for nonprofits, small businesses, and grassroots orgs.
We handle: setting up content hierarchy and governance, creating new landing pages, updating existing pages, writing and publishing blog posts and news updates, graphics and media support, copywriting, basic SEO and accessibility alignment, and troubleshooting for layout or publishing issues
What you get: reliable content updates with quick turnaround, direct access to a content manager, end-to-end support for web copy and graphics, and actionable recommendations for site optimization and upgrades
Sometimes, your need a whole new digital tool. Whether it’s a resource hub, an interactive map, or a data-driven app, we help small organizations design products that fit their mission, budget, and users.
What we do: product discovery & research, user-centered design, technical planning, roadmapping
What you get: high-fidelity wireframes, user flows, and prototypes; recommended platforms and integrations for lightweight builds; a roadmap with prioritized features and clear milestones; an assessment of total cost of ownership and long-term sustainability; plus connections to lean, mission-aligned development teams
Cost: Project-based – reach out to discuss your needs!
In 2012, a massive internet protest brought Congress to a halt. Millions mobilized online to stop SOPA and PIPA, two bills that threatened net neutrality and the free flow of information online. More than 7 million people signed petitions, and 4.5 million contacted their representatives. It was a catalyst moment that revealed how digital platforms could command widespread attention from traditional institutions.
That moment helped spark a market boom in online petitioning tools, CRMs, and campaign platforms designed to scale digital activism. More than a decade later, many of these tools have grown rapidly, and it’s time to take a closer look. Who owns them now? Are they controlled by private equity? How are their data practices? Are they properly amplifying grassroots power? As these platforms become essential infrastructure for modern movements, we have to ask: who really benefits from these platforms, and at what cost?
Here are four things to keep in mind about what’s happening behind the screen:
1. Who owns the user data, and how is it used?
Most major advocacy platforms, like NationBuilder and Action Network, are proprietary and closed-source, meaning they don’t share their code base or data practices in the interest of transparency. While it’s up to client organizations to dictate how to use the data they collect, the platforms still control the underlying infrastructure, retaining broad control over how that data is stored, accessed, and potentially leveraged.
Over the last five years, Apax Partners, a UK-based private equity firm, has slowly acquired much of the progressive digital advocacy ecosystem, including EveryAction, ActionKit, Salsa Labs, and NGP VAN, consolidating them under a single, profit-seeking enterprise known as Bonterra Tech. As the data processor, Bonterra Tech now controls the digital infrastructure housing vast amounts of user data collected by its subsidiaries. While data processors often uphold policies against selling or sharing user data, there’s often little clarity around how they may use the data internally. For example, Apax Partners also holds interests in defense contractors, including a company blacklisted by the UN for operating in illegal settlements in Palestine. With this in mind, it’s fair to wonder: Could insights from social justice campaigns quietly feed strategies for profit in entirely different industries?
2. Who drives campaign interests?
Implicit in their high costs, dominant advocacy platforms are often built to promote hierarchical organizing, where decisions are made by a well-resourced central org or campaign leadership without sustained collaboration with impacted communities. The platforms routinely gather personal data such as emails, zip codes, donation histories, and even personal stories but neglect to offer functionality that could drive the continued input or consent of the very people the campaigns aim to uplift, such as visibility into campaign strategies, insight into how their data is analyzed, or participatory tools for shaping campaigns.
Instead, these insights are available only to campaign managers to help guide top-down decisions on messaging, targeting, and fundraising, often at the expense of local groups. For marginalized communities, these platforms reinforce a dynamic where they are mobilized only during urgent moments but excluded from ongoing strategic planning and decision-making.
3. Are transactional engagements prioritized?
Nonprofits, like corporations, are also driven by return on investment. While the goal isn’t profit, success is still measured by quantifiable outcomes – usually the number of people who click, sign, or donate. Digital advocacy tools cater to this pressure by making it easy to generate high-volume engagement through quick actions. But this efficiency means focusing on surface-level interactions, favoring volume over substance. These tools can build off momentum and energy but aren’t designed to support long-term organizing or deeper community-building
The advocacy platform 5 Calls took off this year, recording as many as 700,000 engagements in one week. As a nonprofit with an open-source product, they value transparency and community involvement. But is that enough to counteract the broader trends shaping digital advocacy today? 5 Calls’s reliance on prewritten scripts and curated issues can reduce collective energy to a top-down transaction. Without strong feedback loops, they risk losing meaningful participant input and sustained engagement. As advocacy campaigns chase bigger numbers, tools like this become treated as substitutes for organizing, rather than one small part of a broader ecosystem.
4. How is the action monetized?
When people sign a petition, donate, or join a campaign, advocacy platforms collect not just their basic info, but also behavioral data, like what they click, when they engage, and how often they take action. This data is used to create pathways for fundraising and marketing automation, creating detailed profiles that can be leveraged for targeted outreach. These targeting tools are often a key selling point for platforms, allowing them to charge clients more based on improved engagement and donation results.
Platforms also benefit monetarily from the visibility and credibility of hosting high-profile campaigns. That attention attracts investors and institutional partners, concentrating power within the tech infrastructure. Grassroots movements, meanwhile, provide the energy but may not receive the resources. Take Change.org as a key example – while it’s branded as a public platform for citizen action, it’s actually operated by a for-profit company. The platform monetizes petitions by encouraging targeted viewers to chip in financially. However, those donations typically go to Change.org itself, not to the organizers of the petitions or the communities impacted. This is not an uncommon revenue model for online petitioning tools – the emotional urgency of social causes becomes a revenue stream, while the people doing the actual work remain unsupported.
What’s the Alternative?
To build truly liberatory digital infrastructure, we need advocacy tools that involve impacted individuals and communities in shaping how technology is designed and deployed. Open-source platforms offer a promising path, allowing movements to adapt and audit tools to serve their needs rather than corporate incentives. Beyond the tech stack, data sovereignty must also be prioritized with clear, enforceable guidelines about who controls information and how it’s used. And rather than tools that funnel people into campaigns for short-term gains, infrastructure should support long-term relationship-building and collective care.
The future of movement tech shouldn’t look like a sales dashboard – it should look like a transparent, participatory space where people co-create, share responsibility, and benefit collectively
PLEA (Prison Labor Exploitation Awareness) is a community-led, AI-assisted organizing infrastructure and action toolkit that leverages machine learning and generative AI to collect, organize, and analyze publicly available and user-generated data on prison labor, transforming insights into opportunities for individual and collective action.
PLEA’s goal is to create new pathways for transparency, dignity, and economic justice within one of the country’s least visible labor systems.
Key Features
Dashboard
An intuitive interface allows users to easily open prison labor issues and discover calls for collective action.
Crowd-Sourced Insights
An LLM layer analyzes user-submitted issues with structured system data to build its comprehensive analysis.
GenAI Advocacy Content
An AI model creates advocacy content which users can review and refine with tools such as content suggestions and access to a data library that assists in referencing relevant legal and policy frameworks.
Data Library
When users complete their recommended advocacy actions, the data is saved in the structured repository.
Central Organizer
Using agentic AI, the system detects patterns in reported issues and outcomes and suggests next steps for collective actions across the full user base.