Thank you so much for that question.
You know, social fundraising is actually a relatively new phenomenon. GoFundMe was founded in 2010. Our mission is to help people help each other. Right now with the Ukraine crisis, we've raised, just since the invasion, over $50 million from over 140 countries. As you say, it's wonderful how people can come together to help one another in times of need. We want to make sure we don't do anything here that would impact that.
At the same time, to your point, there aren't any existing laws or regulations, to my knowledge, that directly regulate peer-to-peer crowdfunding that's done on platforms. What we do see in other regions around the world is the regulation falling on the fundraiser organizer, the person who's actually responsible for soliciting the donations. In some jurisdictions, those individuals are required to get permits or government approval before they start fundraising. In other jurisdictions, like Singapore, we see voluntary codes of practice that their online fundraising platforms are asked to adhere to that outline best practices for protecting users; certain prevention against data leaks; privacy rights; early fraud detection, and things like that.
I'm really only aware of one country, and that's Romania right now, that puts regulations on the donors. It has to do with the amount of the donation. If you try to raise over $200 U.S. on a [Technical difficulty—Editor] paperwork with the Romanian government and go through a different process. So [Technical difficulty—Editor] data privacy—