The new flag logo transforms into a roaring, retro dinosaur.
Mozilla has overhauled its branding to pay homage to its Netscape roots and better distinguish the wider organization from its Firefox web browser. The most notable change is to the company’s logo: what was previously a sans-serif wordmark styled as “Moz://a” has been updated to correctly spell out the Mozilla name, featuring a new customized typeface and an M-shaped flag.
According to Mozilla, the flag symbolizes the brand’s “activist spirit.” That fits with the image that the Mozilla Foundation, which is leading the company, is attempting to build: describing itself as “a non-profit organization that promotes openness, innovation, and participation on the Internet” and regularly releasing privacy reports that investigate tech companies’ policy and security practices.
Wikipedia says that, yes, it was originally a play on Godzilla, and also green, back when it was still internal to Netscape.
When they started setting up the Mozilla Foundation, a new design was created, of a red T-Rex.
I like the Moz://a branding, altough most people wouldn't get it, so it makes sense to switch to correct spelling.
Whether the T-Rex is the coreect choice, is another question. I do like that it feels more creative than the basic, reduced logos of today.
Edit: I do like the new Logo. It looks good and it does match its "activist spirit". Mozilla the corporation is different from the foundation, and I do believe, that Mozilla is closer to its roots than all other browser vendors - including the reskins of Chromium.
I saw a discussion on HackerNews where one person claimed a rebrand is "almost always a sign of distress", which seems far more speculative than informative. I tried looking it up, and while distress might be one possibility, it's only one of many. Some companies might think their logo is outdated, and choose to update it. That might be especially true for tech companies, where style changes rapidly.
Another possibility I saw was that companies will change branding when they are trying to change direction. Apparently the Steve Teixeira layoff was actually more about AI and Mozilla Social than I had anticipated (he was pushing against AI, apparently, and mozilla.social was his baby), so this might coincide with a full embrace of AI or some other change.
ETA:
Mozilla is using a mix of saturated green, pink, and orange (with the latter acting as a subtle nod to the popular Firefox browser) to inject a pop of color against a white or black base.
Does anybody see pink or orange? All I see are black, white, and shades of green.
I tried to look up the Mozilla Foundation page announcing this, but it looks like they just gave interviews announcing the change. Phrases like "activist spirit," "grassroots to government," "tech with a cause" (paywall), and the perennial "reclaim the internet" ring a little hollow now.
One more tidbit: the previous Mozilla logo was sort of crowdsourced, Mozilla called it "our logo journey". This one, by comparison, was between Mozilla and the agency that commissioned.