Nothing Personal needed an identity that was unmistakably its own: a platform that could live within the Mozilla ecosystem while openly questioning the internet culture it seeks to change.
The identity transforms Nothing Personal into a credible editorial brand, giving Mozilla something rare for a nonprofit: an authentic cultural voice in today’s crowded media landscape.
Building on the Mozilla Foundation’s typography, the NP. logo is a flexible frame that can adapt to its context, functioning as a pop-up window, censor bar, patch, or protest sign.
The broader visual language borrows freely from the vernacular of the early web—browser chrome, chat windows, file menus, scroll bars, and system fonts.
Gen Z and Millennial readers have watched the internet’s early promise give way to surveillance capitalism, algorithmic feeds, AI slop, and subscription fatigue. In 2025, the Mozilla Foundation launched Nothing Personal, a countercultural editorial platform for the post-naive internet—independent thinkers, technologists, and creatives who still believe the web can be better but are no longer willing to trade their attention, data, or autonomy to access it.
Created as part of the Mozilla Foundation’s comprehensive rebrand, Nothing Personal needed an identity that was unmistakably its own: a platform that could live within the Mozilla ecosystem while openly questioning the internet culture it seeks to change. Pentagram developed a distinct visual and verbal language that transforms Nothing Personal into a credible editorial brand, giving Mozilla something rare for a nonprofit: an authentic cultural voice in today’s crowded media landscape.
The strategy is built around a simple idea: belong and rebel. Nothing Personal needed to inherit the Foundation’s credibility and visual DNA while sounding nothing like an institution. Conceived to stand alongside the world’s leading technology and culture publications, the platform is led by award-winning journalist, editor, and digital strategist Bourrée Lam, formerly of The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, and Freakonomics. Through commissioned long-form journalism, criticism, podcasts, and independent product reviews, it positions Mozilla as an active participant in digital culture rather than simply an advocate for it.
The verbal identity begins with a name that does double duty. “Nothing Personal” is both a familiar disclaimer—the phrase delivered just before something very personal is said—and a promise: here, your data isn’t the product. That tension shapes an editorial voice where headlines and copy operate on two levels at once—deadpan on the surface, pointed underneath. The tone is sharp, self-aware, and quietly subversive: journalism that challenges digital culture without taking itself too seriously.
The visual identity builds on the Mozilla Foundation’s typography, pushing it in a bolder direction with exaggerated display weights and a deliberate sense of awkwardness—large, direct, and slightly off-balance. At its center is the NP. logo, a chunky wordmark drawn from the same typeface. Always contained within a simple rectangle, it feels closer to a newsstand headline or bumper sticker than a conventional logo. The frame shifts with its context, functioning as a browser tab, pop-up window, censor bar, patch, or protest placard, allowing the identity to move fluidly between publication, product, and activism.
The broader visual language borrows freely from the vernacular of the early web—browser chrome, chat windows, file menus, scroll bars, and system fonts. Candid, unretouched photography is frequently interrupted by the NP. frame, which crops across a subject’s face to quietly question who gets to be seen—and on whose terms—in an always-surveilled internet. A saturated palette of yellows, greens, oranges, reds, blues, cyans, and browns keeps the system feeling equally at home on screen and in the street.
The identity extends seamlessly across every touchpoint. Online, it anchors nothingpersonal.org and editorial layouts built around oversized typography. In print, it defines ANALOG, the platform’s zine; in the physical world, it scales from tote bags and T-shirts to bus shelters and billboards declaring, “Escape the Algorithm.” Together, the system gives the Mozilla Foundation something few nonprofits possess: a voice with posture—a way of inhabiting digital culture rather than simply commenting on it.
Office
- New York
Partner
Project team
- Alex Hulme
- Saundra Marcel
- David Dai
- Donovan Brien
- Yubin Won