About FindMyMoney.App

JJ Ben-Joseph's winding quest to fund AgentCures became the blueprint for FindMyMoney.App.

How JJ Ben-Joseph’s search for hope became a map for others.

The story of FindMyMoney.App began with exhaustion, not inspiration.

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For months, JJ Ben-Joseph sat at his desk surrounded by open tabs and fading coffee cups, trying to find a way to fund AgentCures, the AI drug-discovery platform he had built from scratch. His idea was bold: use artificial intelligence to help small labs, independent scientists, and patient advocates accelerate treatments for rare diseases. But no matter how many applications he filled out, the results were always the same. Rejection letters, unanswered emails, and forms that seemed designed to wear down the very people they claimed to help.

When he was trying to get funding, he found himself trapped in a maze of conflicting eligibility rules, missing translations, and programs that quietly shut their doors to newcomers. The Innovation Authority had dozens of initiatives, but each seemed to require a sponsor, a clinic address, or a prior success story. International grants praised his mission, then asked for revenue he did not yet have. Venture capitalists nodded politely and told him to come back once the trials had begun.

He kept going anyway. Out of habit. Out of love. Out of a refusal to let the dream die.

To stay sane, he began to document everything. Every government fund, every accelerator, every obscure fellowship or forgotten startup challenge. He made notes in the margins: “accepts founders without PhDs,” “deadline extended last year,” “call early, the manager actually answers.” The spreadsheet grew until it looked less like a budget plan and more like a map of hidden doorways.

Then one night, he realized something simple and profound. The map itself was worth more than all the forms he had ever filled out.

That was the beginning of FindMyMoney.App.

JJ decided to build what he wished had existed when he started: a living, breathing guide to real opportunities, written in human language and updated by people who cared. He called on his friends from the wider TensorSpace Universe — the scientists from AgentCures, the engineers from AgentCalc, and the researchers who had fought their own battles with bureaucracy. Together they built an AI crawler that could scan the world for funding, verify it, and discard the scams and dead links that cluttered the path.

By the time they launched quietly, the platform already held more than five hundred verified opportunities. Each listing came with context: who it was for, how hard it was to apply, and what traps to avoid. Some entries even carried small handwritten notes from JJ himself, the kind of details that never appear in official portals. “Call before noon, she’s kind,” or “translation tool works fine here, don’t give up.”

The response was immediate. Founders who had nearly quit wrote back to say they had found their lifeline. Researchers discovered programs that matched their passions. Caregivers used the site to locate family grants that had been buried under layers of policy pages. The tone of the platform was different from anything else online. It felt like a conversation between people who had all stood at the same crossroads.

For JJ, it was never about building another startup. It was about building trust.

He remembered what it felt like to stare at a blinking cursor, wondering if anyone would ever believe in his work. He wanted every visitor to FindMyMoney.App to feel the opposite of that moment. To know that someone had already walked ahead, clearing the path, lighting small lanterns in the dark.

As the platform grew, so did its purpose. FindMyMoney.App began to attract teachers searching for classroom innovation funds, artists applying for cultural grants, and students seeking scholarships. Each found the same careful voice guiding them through the fog. JJ expanded the database, added new categories, and built gentle alerts to warn users before deadlines closed. Every update was written with empathy and precision, balancing technology with humanity.

Behind the scenes, a small team reviewed each entry like a newsroom fact-check. They confirmed deadlines, verified contacts, and updated status notes before anything went live. The process was slow but sacred. JJ believed that accuracy was a form of respect.

When the first journalist mentioned the site in a newsletter, the traffic doubled overnight. But the real reward came in the emails. One mother wrote that she had found support for her child’s therapy through a program she never knew existed. Another founder said the site had saved her company from shutting down. JJ read every message. Some made him smile, others made him cry. All reminded him why he had started.

FindMyMoney.App became more than a website. It became a movement of shared persistence. The AI crawler now updates new listings daily. The community contributes leads that are verified and published for everyone’s benefit. And the weekly digest — written in JJ’s warm, human tone — continues to arrive in inboxes across the world, reminding readers that help is closer than it seems.

FindMyMoney.App is now part of the broader TensorSpace Universe, a constellation of tools built with one philosophy: empower the doers. From AgentCures to AgentCalc to MyContract.Space, every project reflects the same belief that access should not depend on privilege, and that technology should tell stories worth following.

If you are somewhere between hope and exhaustion, looking for a way to keep your vision alive, this platform was built for you.

The maze still exists, but now there are guideposts.

And one of them says: Keep going. You are not alone.