The honest guide to digital begging.
Ten in-depth pillar pages on what digital begging is, how micro-donations actually work, and why strangers send dollars to other strangers across the internet.
Digital begging is one human asking another for money online — directly, transparently, without a charity in the middle. Here is how it actually works.
ReadA direct guide to asking for money on the internet without fake stories, fake urgency, or fake charities. Just one wallet and the truth.
ReadCyber begging — also called internet begging or e-begging — is the act of asking strangers online for money, directly, with no charity in between.
ReadWhy do strangers send money to people they will never meet? Five honest reasons, none of them about being a good person.
ReadWhat does the research actually say about why humans help strangers? Reciprocal altruism, warm glow, and the cost of pretending not to care.
ReadA live test of whether kindness can cross the internet for the price of one dollar. The wallet is public. The counter is real.
ReadMicro donations are gifts of $1 or less. They sound trivial. At internet scale, they are not. Here is the math, the mechanics, and the friction.
ReadIf you are one person who needs money — not an organization — this is what your options look like. Pros, cons, fees, and the honest comparison.
ReadDirect human support is one person giving money to another with no intermediary. Why it is growing, how to do it safely, and where it falls short.
ReadCrypto donations make $1 gifts actually possible because the fees are near zero. Here is how USDT on TRON works, in plain language.
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