
The Mozilla Foundation logo, used by the American nonprofit foundation focused on the open internet, digital rights, and responsible technology, currently appears in at least two versions. In both cases, the core element is a large black or white letter M with three colored inserts placed between the parts of the letter: turquoise on the left, orange at the top center, and yellow on the right. In the vertical version, this sign is paired with the two-line Mozilla Foundation wordmark in black or white. In the horizontal version, the entire Mozilla Foundation wordmark follows the same principle, but parts of the letters also include colored geometric inserts in turquoise, green, yellow, and orange. The word Mozilla historically originated as a blend of “Mosaic killer” and “Godzilla,” while the word Foundation indicates the organization’s status as a foundation.
Mozilla Foundation was established in the United States in 2003 as an independent nonprofit foundation that grew out of the Mozilla project. Today, the foundation defines its mission as building a better technology future and pursues it through grant programs, research, educational initiatives, public campaigns, and Mozilla Festival. Its main areas of work include more open and human-centered technology, privacy, digital rights, open source, and trustworthy AI. Mozilla Foundation also remains the parent organization of Mozilla Corporation and supports the broader Mozilla ecosystem.








