Personal projects Aza Raskin participated in a talk with his father,
Jef Raskin, on
user interfaces, at age 10, at a meeting of the
San Francisco chapter of
the Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction (SIGCHI). He holds bachelor's degrees in
mathematics and
physics from the
University of Chicago. In 2004, he worked with his father at the Raskin Center for Humane Interfaces, on the development of
Archy software, which is a user interface paradigm. In 2005, after his father's death, he founded Humanized, where he continued working on the Archy paradigm and created the language-based, service-oriented Enso software. Raskin is an active
phishing researcher, best known for discovering the
tabnabbing attack, which takes advantage of open browser tabs to launch phishing sites without the user's knowledge. He also has a number of smaller projects, such as Algorithm Ink (based on Context Free), which generates
art from a
formal grammar. In
Wired UK magazine's series,
Rebooting Britain, Raskin advocated for iterative governance, and was featured on the magazine's cover. He has also given a
TED talk about new humane directions for computing.
Mozilla In 2008, Humanized employees, including Raskin, joined the
Mozilla Corporation as part of a hire-out. Raskin was named head of user experience at
Mozilla Labs. In 2010, Raskin was appointed to the position of creative lead for Firefox. and
Firefox for mobile, and he wrote the original specification for the geolocation application programming interface (API). In 2010, Raskin introduced Tab Candy—the result of his work on the Firefox team at Mozilla. By organizing tabs spatially, Tab Candy allowed the user to "organize browsing, to see all of our tabs at once, and focus on the task at hand".
Computerworld called Tab Candy's initial design and
alpha release "the best new browser feature since tabs were invented". Tab Candy—renamed Firefox Panorama—was incorporated into the initial Firefox 4 release (as a hidden default), but it was later removed from the default Firefox package and converted to an add-on.
Startups Raskin has founded two other companies besides Humanized, including
Songza, a
music meta-search tool, and Bloxes, which sold furniture made out of cardboard. Songza was acquired in late 2008 by
Amie Street, an
Amazon-backed company.
Songza was eventually bought by Google and now powers much of
Google Play. Songza was also responsible for enabling the creation of mood- and activity-based playlists. By the end of 2010, Raskin had left Mozilla to co-launch a start-up company called Massive Health. His goal was to apply design principles to the goal of maintaining health. In 2011,
Fast Company conferred its Master of Design award on him for this work. On April 16, 2012, Massive Health announced that Raskin would lead the company as its “chief vision officer”. In 2013, Massive Health was acquired by Jawbone. In 2017, Raskin founded the Earth Species Project, a non-profit organization focused on using AI to decode non-human
communication, especially
human–animal communication. The project is the subject of an NPR Invisibilia podcast episode in 2020.
Media and other activities In 2018, Raskin was featured on the cover of
Off Screen Magazine. In 2019 he was selected to be a guest curator for
Ars Electronica's 40th anniversary exhibit. and has exhibited his artwork at an exhibition about North and South Korea. Raskin has been featured in
Forbes 30 Under 30, and included in
Fast Company's “Most Creative People" list.
Opinions on technology use As one of the co-founders of the
Center for Humane Technology,
The Wall Street Journal,
Bits & Pretzels,
Slush,
Humanity 2.0, and
Laurie Segall.
Works Writing • • • • • (contributor) •
Talks • • • • • • • • ==References==