The book Deep Thought on Area is free of charge in most non-commercial settings, but with the request that wealthy users make an appropriate donation to the nominated charity. See the license within the book for full details. Currently the nominated charity is Sexual Health and Family Planning ACT.
Every Australian state and territory has an organisation like this. So how did I choose between these 8 organisations? Why have I chosen the organisation that serves the ACT, the region with likely the lowest rate of people needing financial assistance with family planning issues and one of the best average levels of knowledge?
Well, it comes down to convenience and privacy. If you represent one of the other 7 state/territory organisations and want to try to supplant SHFPACT as the nominated charity for this book, here's what you need to do.
Put your Privacy Policy on your web site. If you don't do this, it makes you seem really dodgy!
Ensure your web site supports TOR Browser. If your privacy policy claims that you don't track the IP numbers of people using your web site, but you stop people from accessing your web site with the only browser with built-in protection against IP tracking, expect people to treat your claim with suspicion.
Ensure your site allows secure https connections. Don't rely on insecure http connections.
Ensure your web site still works if people use plug-ins like NoScript and Ghostery to stop you from deploying tracking cookies and beacons in their web browser. If your web site fails to load when people use these plug-ins, it gives the impression you are tracking visitors to your site.
Don't just comply with the Australian Privacy laws. Realise that some people visiting your site will be from Europe and have rights under the GDPR legislation. These visitors have the right to know who you are sharing data with, so ensure your privacy policy includes a list of all companies who may access your users' data.
Ensure your web site includes information on how to donate. If it doesn't, I'm going to assume that you are so well funded that you don't need additional donations.
Make it easy to donate. For one organisation it seems the only way to donate is by completing the “optional donation” section of the form to apply for membership of the organisation, and you can only apply if you can nominate referees who are already members. Sounds like that organisation is very choosy about who they will accept donations from.
Provide a route that lets people donate to your organisation without leaking information to any third parties. If the only donation route you provide is via a third party whose privacy statement shows them using services from 4 of the world's big 5 data aggregators, then there's no way I'm going to deal with you. (And yes, one of the donation routes SHFPACT provides does involve a company with less than stellar privacy credentials, but they also provide several safer routes, including routes that give complete anonymity if you don't need a receipt for tax purposes.)
If you want to include a map of your clinic locations on your web site, don't use a map provided by a company famous for tracking its map users. Use OpenStreetMap instead.