NGOs – Receive crypto donations autonomously
What you can do today
- Publish a receiving address per chain
- Receive direct crypto donations
- Manual per-campaign reconciliation
Current limits
- Small amounts are inefficient due to gas
- Aggregated public reporting is hard without tools
- Multi-chain and multi-wallet complexity

DustEthic adds
- Aggregated channel per crypto with relayers
- Batched transfers, gas covered by relayers
- Public reports with explorer links
Our vision
Aggregated donation flows, publicly traceable and simple to reconcile. Batch sends are grouped by cause or NGO, sponsored by relayers, with public and auditable parameters. No fiat references, everything in crypto units and percentages.
See also : DustEthic Standard
How it works – NGO side
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- Request onboarding through the form
- Provide one or more receiving addresses per target chain
- Validate public campaign parameters (aggregation window, commission, tech reserve)
- Receive batched transfers at the end of the aggregation window
- Check public reports and block explorer links
Costs and net amount
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- Relayer commission: percentage of donated crypto (indicative 5% – 15% degressive)
- Tech & safety reserve: 0.5% – 1% depending on chain and complexity
- Network gas: covered natively by relayers and budgeted within the above model
Net to NGO = Gross – commission – tech reserve. No fiat equivalents displayed. Any conversion to fiat is at the NGO’s discretion, outside DustEthic scope.
Traceability and reports
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- Public campaign parameters published by the relayer
- On-chain block explorer links for each aggregated transfer
- Public per-campaign history to ease audits
Timing
Aggregation window: limited and announced by each relayer (e.g., 1 to 3 months recommended).
Assets and networks
ETH, USDC, USDT on L2 EVM (L2-first). L1 optional. Polygon PoS if gas in POL is handled by the relayer.
Note — We think in crypto units. Percentages stay constant; fiat values vary until conversion.
Why not publish a crypto address openly?
Just like an email address, a public crypto address exposed online can:
- Be used for transactional spam → Bots may send unwanted tokens (often worthless) to your address, cluttering your transaction history and making it harder to track real donations.
- Be scraped by bots for malicious campaigns → Automated scripts collect visible addresses from websites to build databases, sometimes used for phishing or fraudulent targeting.
- Be linked to suspicious activity by third parties → Anyone can send funds to your address, and those transactions are public. This can create unintended associations with unethical wallets or projects, even if you have no connection to them.