diff --git a/src/_blog/major-improvements-to-omnilingo.md b/src/_blog/major-improvements-to-omnilingo.md index 947ae88b..5cde7c52 100644 --- a/src/_blog/major-improvements-to-omnilingo.md +++ b/src/_blog/major-improvements-to-omnilingo.md @@ -11,7 +11,9 @@ tags: Nearly two years ago, the IPFS Dev Grants program funded the first grant for Omnilingo to explore how IPFS could meet the needs of their users - groups with limited bandwidth and applications which work offline-first, allowing full user control of data. You can read the [original post from 2021](https://blog.ipfs.tech/2021-12-17-omnilingo/), and several iterations of the grant later (generously provided by the Filecoin Foundation) we're happy to share an update. -The mission of Omnilingo is inspiring, and its authors are an incredible team who are pushing on a lot of hard problems all at once, including new approaches to consent-driven data access and revocation patterns. This is critical work and an extraordinarily important use of IPFS that we are happy to shine a light on. - Dietrich Ayala, technical grant advisor to Omnilingo +The mission of Omnilingo is inspiring, and its authors are an incredible team who are pushing on a lot of hard problems all at once, including new approaches to consent-driven data access and revocation patterns. This is critical work and an extraordinarily important use of IPFS that we are happy to shine a light on. + +- Dietrich Ayala, technical grant advisor to Omnilingo ## Project Update: Omnilingo