About · Foundation

Our parent is a 501(c)(3). This changes what we can and can't do.

Elites Generation Foundation is the irrevocable holder of the mission. Its charter legally forbids behavioral advertising, selling individual user data, and dark-pattern monetization. Those commitments flow down to us through our Services Agreement with the Foundation.

When a prospect asks 'what happens if you get acquired?' the answer is: the Foundation's board doesn't have to agree, and an acquirer inherits the charter. Mission lock is structural here, not a values statement.

We give a portion of subsidiary profits back to the Foundation every year, which funds the free core platform and Foundation-subsidized deployments in Title I schools, FQHCs, and HBCU/MSI institutions.

The Foundation home

The mission, the commitments, and the public accountability live at elitesgen.org.

If you're a procurement lead reading this, the Foundation site is where you will find the charter language, the governance structure, and the public transparency that backs every commitment on the .com.

Foundation homeelitesgen.org
What flows down to us

Three commitments, structurally guaranteed.

These are charter-level, not policy-level. Changing them requires Foundation board action, not a product decision.

  1. 01

    No behavioral advertising, ever.

    The Foundation charter forbids it. There is no 'we might someday' clause. This is the same model Signal, Mozilla, and Wikimedia operate under.

  2. 02

    No sale of individual user data, ever.

    Aggregated, cohort-level outcome reporting is what customers pay us for. Selling the underlying data stream is structurally blocked.

  3. 03

    Free core platform for individuals, forever.

    The consumer surface at elitesgen.org stays free at its core. Subsidiary revenue and Foundation partnerships sustain that commitment.

For buyers

Mission lock is a structural differentiator, not a rhetorical one.

Most wellbeing vendors sign values statements that can be redrafted after a Series B. Our commitments are held by a 501(c)(3) parent that an acquirer would have to convince a charitable-purpose board to unwind. That's a very different conversation than asking a founder to change their mind.

For procurement teams doing the diligence, this is the question worth surfacing: who holds the commitments, and can they be revised without external review? Here, the answer is the Foundation board, and no.

Foundation-backed

Elitesgen, Inc. is wholly owned by Elites Generation Foundation, a 501(c)(3) whose charter legally forbids behavioral advertising and the sale of individual user data.

Visit elitesgen.org
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The structure is the point. Let's talk about what you're buying.

A demo scoped to your audience, with the charter conversation included if that's what your diligence needs.