Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Features

Mobile phones bring direct aid to Ukraine

Add as a preferred source on Google

Mobile phone users are donating to Ukraine via new technologies and changing the way international aid is distributed. Tech solutions like cryptocurrencies, Airbnb, and other methods are being used to send money directly to those affected by the war in Ukraine.

In a Twitter post, Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky wrote that 434,000 nights had been booked so far on the platform, which is equivalent to $15 million transferred to hosts in Ukraine. The outpouring of online support for Ukraine demonstrates that the future of international aid may lie in individual donations through software rather than organized charities.

Recommended Videos

“This all whittles down to the power technology and the companies’ vast networks have to connect consumers to philanthropic causes all over the world,” Molly Trerotola, the head of social impact at ShoppingGives, an eCommerce platform that connects brands and nonprofits, said in an email interview.

Removing the middleman

In the first days of the war, thousands of people booked Airbnb rooms in Ukraine even though they had no intention of staying in the country. The idea was that the hosts in Ukraine would benefit directly from the money. More recently, Airbnb has set up a system where users can offer to host refugees.

“Airbnb.org helps fund the cost of short-term stays, and all service fees are waived, so Airbnb doesn’t make any money on these stays,” the company wrote on its website. “As a host, you can help these funds stretch even further by offering free or discounted stays.”

Brands are going to play a huge role in this by giving consumers the option to vote with their dollars.

Apple is among the companies that have made it simpler to support the citizens of Ukraine. A banner at the top of Apple’s website has a donation button that directs you to the Music or iTunes app. Donations go through your Apple ID, and you’ll use whichever payment method is attached to your account.

Trerotola noted that the future of aid is giving individuals the power to coalesce to do more good and give back through innovative tech. Her company, ShoppingGives, allows companies to integrate a method of donating money to charitable causes into their websites. “Brands are going to play a huge role in this by giving consumers the option to vote with their dollars,” Trerotola added.

Crypto goes to war

Concet art shows the acronym MFT on a dark blue background.
Sergey Shulgin/Getty Images

Crypto users are also supporting the Ukrainian government. Ukraine has received more than $50 million in crypto donations since the war started, according to research from blockchain analytics firm Elliptic.

On February 26, Twitter accounts belonging to the Ukrainian government posted requests for crypto-asset donations. So far, the Bitcoin, Ethereum, TRON, Polkadot, Dogecoin, and Solana addresses listed in the tweets have received donations worth $54.4 million.

But potential donors should beware, Steven Bumbera, the chief operating officer of the cryptocurrency organization Many Worlds Token, said in an email interview.

“There are no apps being used for this and be nearly certain that if someone invites you to download an unknown app for donating crypto to Ukraine, it is likely a scam,” he said.

The only application you need to donate crypto is a wallet such as MetaMask or TrustWallet, Bumbera said. Ukraine put out an official tweet with its wallet address, whichs is like a public-facing accounting/routing number combination that does not need to be secured. To donate crypto to an organization in Ukraine, you need three items. The first is a wallet to store, send, and receive crypto. The second is an exchange such as Coinbase, Crypto.com, or Binance. The third is the wallet address of the person or organization that you want to donate to. Some charities are accepting crypto donations directly, including Come Back Alive, Ukraine DAO, and the Kyiv Independent, an English-language Ukrainian newspaper that has been monitoring the war from the ground.

“Distribution of the aid will be a major challenge during this war in Ukraine and after the war,” Konstantyn Perederiy, a senior vice president at Customertimes, a consulting firm with employees in Ukraine, told Lifewire via email. “Digital infrastructure including the apps and web-based applications will play one of the key roles in this process due to the complexity of aid distribution, which will increase in the future. Aid will include real estate restoration and lots of humanitarian needs.”

Sascha Brodsky
Sascha Brodsky is a writer who focuses on consumer technologies and privacy issues for a broad range of outlets. He’s been…
Made by Google August 2026: Everything we expect from the Pixel 11 launch event
Tensor G6. Gemini Intelligence. Higher prices. Google's biggest hardware event in years lands August 12, and here's what every major leak tells us to expect.
Google Pixel 10 Pro in the official silicon case

The next three months will define the future of the smartphone market across the globe. As three of the most important handset makers gear up to unveil the next generation of foldables and flagships, the memory crisis is worsening with each passing quarter, pushing up phone prices across every segment.

We have Samsung going live on July 22, 2026, with its latest foldables, followed by Apple’s new CEO, John Ternus, revealing the iPhone 18 Pro and the first foldable iPhone in September (like they do every year). However, the middle month — August — is when Google finally hosts its “Made by Google” launch event, a hardware-focused event that will unveil the Pixel 11 series. 

Read more
WhatsApp is creating its own cloud backup alternative for iPhone users
WhatsApp is building a backup service with 2GB free and paid plans up to 1TB.
Two phones on a table next to each other. One is showing the WhatsApp logo, and the other is running the WhatsApp application.

If your iCloud storage is constantly running low, WhatsApp might have a fix coming. Code spotted in the WhatsApp beta for iOS by WABetaInfo reveals that Meta is building its own first-party cloud backup service for iPhone users.

For the first time, you would be able to store your WhatsApp chat history on WhatsApp's own servers instead of iCloud. The feature is still in development and not yet available to beta testers, with no official release date announced.

Read more
Your iPhone could soon flag malicious iMessages before they do any damage
iOS 26.6 will warn you when an iMessage looks suspicious and let you report it to Apple.
imessage-alerts

Apple appears to be adding another layer of protection to iMessage against scams and cyberattacks. Code discovered in iOS 26.6 beta 5 reveals a feature called Malicious Message Detected.

It pops up a warning when your iPhone identifies a potentially dangerous incoming message. The feature was first spotted by X user, who shared a mockup of the alert.

Read more