From the Canyon Edge -- :-Dustin

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Introducing New Branding and Logos for eCryptfs


The time I have spent around Ubuntu has given me a deep appreciation for the finer points of design, branding, themes, and artwork around software development and user interfaces.  From Ubuntu's elegant color schemes and meticulously kerned fonts, to the careful placement and balance of Ubuntu's logos and Canonical's brandmarks, Ubuntu exudes an exquisite level of polish and professionalism, particularly among free software projects.

With this as a backdrop, I have long wanted to refresh and modernize the logos and branding associated with eCryptfs, as an upstream open source project.  For over six years, the eCryptfs logo has been an ever-so-trite yellow key overlayed on top of a pie chart.


Yawn :-o  I'm pretty sure that "logo" was pulled off of a slide deck for IBM management, when Michael Halcrow and Emily Ratliff originally presented the idea of eCryptfs back in 2004.

So I pitched this idea to my new employer, Gazzang, who, as it turns out, has considerable interest in a healthy eCryptfs community, as it forms the basis for several of our cloud encryption products.  Our CEO, Larry, was thrilled by the idea, and gave Heidi (our director of marketing) financial approval to commission the new art from a professional graphic designer.

We felt that eCryptfs, as an active and vibrant open source project, deserved a logo and a mascot that reflects just that.  Everyone uses a lock or a key to represent encryption, so we thought we'd do something different.  We decided we wanted a stylized animal, in the spirit of Linux's Tux, BSD's Daemon, OpenBSD's Puffy, and of course Ubuntu's every growing zoo!

We settled on the honey badger (Mellivora capensis), inspired by its thick skin and ferocious defensive traits, much as eCryptfs adamantly defends your data against even the most determined attackers (honey badger don't care!)  We are, of course, also saluting the running honey badger Internet meme  :-)

 And the font is modern, crisp, clean, and perhaps a little "techy" even.  The "fs" is highlighted, to note the relationship to the filesystem, as well as help demonstrate the pronunciation of the word -- "ecrypt" and then "fs".


Gazzang has contributed all of this artwork to the eCryptfs project under the Creative Commons CC BY-SA 3.0 license.  We hope you enjoy it as much as we do :-)  Let us know what you think!

Now there is one piece we're still missing.  We don't yet have a name for our snarling cryptographic honey badger.  So we're putting it out to you...  Suggestions?  Drop us a comment below!

:-Dustin

7 comments:

  1. It's simple and a bit obvious, but I'd just call him/her "Honey".

    ReplyDelete
  2. May I suggest Duncarron (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duncarron)? Get it, "Done carin'"? OK bad pun, but hey, honey badger don't care.

    ReplyDelete
  3. There's only two real possibilities:
    Bad-ass (probably not appropriate)
    or Randall after the commentator on the linked meme vid.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Clearly the badger should be called Ubarl Onqtre

    ReplyDelete
  5. Following the lines of the honey badger Internet meme, what about Randall?

    (on a unrelated topic, I am having problems posting on this blog using my openid credentials - https://launchpad.net/~deathon2legs, I am able to choose it and launchpad asks me for auth which I gave but when returning to this blog I get an error about the openid service was not recognized)

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love the logo / font and the mascot. Can it be a friendly mascot ? Encryption isn't always about "agressively protecting" your data, is it ? Maybe loosing the mad/upset expression would best communicate how transparent/easy - yet effective - eCryptFS is :)

    ReplyDelete
  7. I recall slapping that original logo together in Inkscape when I had a half hour between meetings one day. The management at the time could barely tolerate dev work on eCryptfs, let alone shell out for a domain or a professional logo. I think I did use a key icon that I had recently used in a slide deck.

    ReplyDelete

Please do not use blog comments for support requests! Blog comments do not scale well to this effect.

Instead, please use Launchpad for Bugs and StackExchange for Questions.
* bugs.launchpad.net
* stackexchange.com

Thanks,
:-Dustin

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