ETA there is a logo with a chunk taken out of the “P” in Proton, which is an (old) textbook way of making it “futuristic”, but that’s not what you described.
The “header” font (“Secure email that protects …”) looks like Optima to me (ETA: Wait, it’s not Optima. That font doesn’t have that hook on the tail of the “y”. Pretty darned close to “Septimus,” though, without being an exact match.) The “Proton” is some geometric sans-serif a la Century Gothic, but it’s not Century Gothic. Looks like the P, at least, is stylized as a logo, but I don’t know if the rest is based on an existing font or not (look for the tell-tale “n” there.)
Thanks for replies–Must be my browser? The font displays for me as a combination of lower-and-uppercase–for example:
tHat yOUR PRIVaCy
…also, lowercase “e” is as large as uppercase–
If you’re not seeing this, must be old-version Firefox rendering it this way–in addition, I tried to copy/paste it here, but it pastes looking “normal”–
Back in BBS days we called that upper/lowercase alternating style “Psycho Chicken” and it was meant derisively. Looks like in many venues it’s still got the same denotation without having carried the name along with.
Ah, thanks. I dug through the CSS and saw “Arizona,” but couldn’t match it to an existing font on a cursory internet search. How did you get the “Flare Light” part? I didn’t see it using the Chrome Inspector, but I don’t dig like that often, so may not have known where to look.
Once I got the hit on Arizona in the CSS, I wimped out and just looked at the example text on their site. Typing “Secure email” into the sample area confirmed it.
It was really popularized by a meme with SpongeBob Squarepants a few years ago. I assume it’s coincidental, but the image is from a clip where SpongeBob is pretending to be a chicken.
SpongeBob is several decades late to that party. Your own link explains it was already quite popular by the 1980s (maybe that’s long enough for it to get unpopular, then popular again, like bell-bottoms).
Identifont has been around forever (and it looks it), but I always found it to be a great resource. Their “fonts by appearance” wizard walks you through various questions to narrow it down to (hopefully) the right font. If you only have a few words you can enter those so it doesn’t ask you about letters/numbers that you don’t know.