The Center for Individual Freedom was founded in 1998 by former tobacco industry executives who sought to counter government restrictions on smoking. It has led efforts to defeat efforts to compel "
dark money" groups like it from being forced to reveal their donors. It won a victory in September 2012 when a U.S. appeals court overturned a lower court decision that increased disclosure requirements. Despite this,
Mother Jones reported in April 2012 that the Center for Individual Freedom had been given $2.75 million from
Crossroads GPS, the conservative non-profit started by
Karl Rove. Paul Ryan, an attorney with the
Campaign Legal Center (a group in favor of campaign finance regulation), says CFIF's anti-disclosure cases are without merit but adds that challenging disclosure laws is a new attempt to deregulate campaign finance. In April 2016, it was reported that CFIF spent $200,000 on advertisements opposing the
Puerto Rico debt relief bill. The Center also launched a radio ad, criticizing Representative
Sean Duffy for his inconsistent stance on the bill. The CFIF supported efforts to repeal net neutrality laws in 2017. A story by
Gizmodo found that CFIF was involved in the communications industry's campaign against
net neutrality. In 2024, CFIF launched a podcast called IP Protection Matters, which discusses
intellectual property issues. ==References==