When the non-profit Net Literacy launched 20 years ago, it started with a simple but powerful idea: Empower those without Internet skills or resources to get online, with youth volunteers serving as teachers and ambassadors. Today, they have grown into a global nonprofit reaching over 250,000 people through digital inclusion and financial education while growing into new areas, such as AI literacy.
However, sustaining that impact across generations requires more than passion; it needs digital permanence and peace of mind that their resources will always be available online. This is what inspired Net Literacy to become one of the first customers to adopt WordPress.com’s 100‑Year Plan.
“A number of things really appealed to us about the 100‑Year Plan,” Net Literacy founder and CEO Dan Kent says. “First of all, it provides us with a lot of simplification and certainty around our operations. As a nonprofit, we’re looking to provide services for multiple generations.”
Planning for certainty
Nonprofits live in cycles of funding and change. As Kent (who founded Net Literacy when he was only 14 years old explains, “As a nonprofit, our fundraising definitely is cyclical […] so, to provide us the certainty and peace of mind for our operations, the 100‑Year Plan protects us from downside risks and ensures that we’re able to continue our mission […] remain on the Internet for anybody around the world to access.”
Net Literacy’s mission is to establish and maintain an open, long-term digital curriculum that will be available for generations. For that, they rely on a website that cannot be lost to expired domains or administrative lapses. According to Kent, “The 100‑Year Plan provides us peace of mind, ensuring that future generations of volunteers […] don’t have to worry about making sure that our resources are accessible for anybody around the world.”
Tools to match the legacy
Net Literacy’s programs tackle long-term challenges like closing the digital divide and spreading AI literacy. “Organizations that solve really big, meaty problems will really value this 100‑Year Plan,” Kent says. “Particularly those […] tackling problems that aren’t easily solved in decades, and need to measure their impact in generations.”
This isn’t just about hosting your website online with world-class open source software. It’s a promise that an organization’s digital presence is built to last and ready for anything. WordPress.com’s century-based products (which also includes 100-year domains) take a multi-layered approach that begins with a long-term investment model to endow the data, ensuring there will always be finances available to maintain the service.
This is then combined with distributed cloud server infrastructure, time-machine like layered backups, seamless trust-account continuity, and integration with the Internet Archive, making the 100-Year Plan not just a hosting plan, but a digital legacy fortress.
A trusted partnership backed by recognition
Net Literacy felt confident about the alignment between WordPress.com and their organizational goals. “WordPress.com has been around as long as we have,” Kent says. “That track record matters.”
Their trust in WordPress.com was reinforced when the 100‑Year Plan and Domain were recognized by Actualidad Economíca as one of the “100 Best Ideas of 2025” — a prestigious Impact Leader Award that underscores its innovation in digital legacy infrastructure.
Building for the long haul — together
Kent’s vision is clear: change is inevitable, but mission continuity is essential.
“The one thing that will be constant going forward is change […] things such as the 100‑Year Plan … will make sure that we have a lot more optionality and make sure that our mission continues into the future,” Kent says.
With both mission and medium secured, Net Literacy is ready for what comes next. Thanks to the 100‑Year Plan, their educational resources won’t vanish — they will endure.
Learn more about how to secure and future-proof your digital legacy with the 100-Year Plan and 100-Year Domain.