Google Will Donate $2 For Every Dollar You Give To Fight Ebola

Google Will Donate $2 For Every Dollar You Give To Fight Ebola
Google CEO Larry Page speaks at a news conference at the Google offices in New York, Monday, May 21, 2012. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
Google CEO Larry Page speaks at a news conference at the Google offices in New York, Monday, May 21, 2012. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

NEW YORK (AP) — Google is launching a campaign to help fight Ebola by contributing $2 for every dollar people donate to a slew of nonprofits such as Save the Children and the Doctors Without Borders.

In addition, the company is also giving $10 million to support nonprofits as they work to contain the disease, which has killed nearly 5,000 people so far. Separately, Google Inc. CEO Larry Page's Family Foundation is donating another $15 million.

Google has set aside $5 million for its matching donation, which means the public will have to donate $2.5 million to reach the maximum amount. This money will go to the donor-advised fund Network for Good, which will then distribute it to "four nonprofits doing critical work in West Africa," Google said, adding that the company will cover processing fees so that all of the money donated will go to the groups.

The gifts come on the heels of a $25 million donation last month by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan toward Ebola response. Facebook Inc. also launched a button that makes it easier for its users to donate to nonprofit groups fighting the disease, though it is not doing matching funds.

Support UNICEF's efforts to combat Ebola through the fundraising widget below.

Before You Go

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A woman reacts after a relative is suspected of dying from the Ebola virus, in the Liberian capital Monrovia
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Healthcare workers in protective gear work at an Ebola treatment center in the west of Freetown, Sierra Leone
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Three people suspected of having contracted the Ebola virus await treatment outside a hospital in the Bomi County area, near Monrovia, Liberia
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African Union Chairperson Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma washes her hands as she arrives in Conakry
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A burial team in protective gear carry the body of woman suspected to have died from the Ebola virus in Monrovia, Liberia
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A healthcare worker in protective gear is seen at an Ebola treatment center in the west of Freetown, Sierra Leone
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Family members and neighbors said that she had been sick for more than a year with an undiagnosed illness and protested her body being taken away as an Ebola victim.
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Varney Jonson, 46, grieves as an Ebola burial team takes away the body of his wife Nama Fambule for cremation
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A team of funeral agents specialised in the burial of victims of the Ebola virus carry a body prior to put it in a grave at the Fing Tom cemetery in Freetown
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A woman reacts after her husband is suspected of dying from the Ebola virus, in the Liberian capital Monrovia
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A burial team unloads an Ebola victim, who died in an ambulance, while collecting him for cremation
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Sanitized gloves and boots hang to dry as a burial team collects Ebola victims from a Ministry of Health treatment center for cremation
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