Research other organizations fulfilling or seeking to fulfill any of the same roles PWGD seeks to provide

Kendra's first suggestion was that we research what's already out there so as not to duplicate efforts. Volunteers for PWGD have done this in the past, but probably most extensively more than a decade ago.

A good example of this sort of public enumeration and contrasting of alternatives is one Snowdrift Cooperative did of the crowdfunding space:

https://wiki.snowdrift.coop/market-research/other-crowdfunding

It is a little vague to say PWGD works for justice and liberty for all, or strives to help people gain the most power possible to all people over their own lives, or even "promotes the technical and physical infrastructure needed to connect people who care about making their own or others’ lives better in one or many ways; educates the public about tools to help people meet, co-ordinate, and act together; fosters and supports democratic decision-making".

So here is another crack at defining what PWGD sets out to do, to compare with what's out there:

People Who Give a Damn seeks to provide tools that increase the power of people to act collectively without ceding control within the group to any sort of elite. (Your typical multinational corporation, for example, is using many practices and tools to act collectively and so more powerfully than the same number of unorganized people even with the same resources, but control over what this collectively powerful association of people does is highly concentrated.) PWGD has a special emphasis on employing sortition, decision-making by random samples of people, as a means for keeping power distributed, especially when it comes to control over coordination. Furthermore, in its crafting of practice and tools, by making everything so developed available available freely, and by making its services broadly available with a preference for people with the least power, PWGD seeks to ensure power becomes broadly distributed not just within specific organizations and groups but among humanity generally (with expected spillover benefits for all forms of life).