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[tor-commits] [tpo/staging] Fix typo



commit 6442ac883f3a0f47555193403aa6b67a9d63de42
Author: hiro <hiro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date:   Mon Apr 29 18:29:41 2019 +0200

    Fix typo
---
 content/about/history/contents.lr | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/content/about/history/contents.lr b/content/about/history/contents.lr
index 9dde452..9b7a56e 100644
--- a/content/about/history/contents.lr
+++ b/content/about/history/contents.lr
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ body:
 
 The Tor Project, Inc, became a 501(c)3 nonprofit in 2006, but the idea of "onion routing" began in the mid 1990s.
 
-**Just like Tor users, the developers, researchers, and funders who've made Tor possible are a diverse group of people. But all of the people who have been involved in Tor are united by a common belief: internet users should have private access to an uncensored web.**
+**Just like Tor users, the developers, researchers, and founders who've made Tor possible are a diverse group of people. But all of the people who have been involved in Tor are united by a common belief: internet users should have private access to an uncensored web.**
 
 In the 1990s, the lack of security on the internet and its ability to be used for tracking and surveillance was becoming clear, and in 1995, David Goldschlag, Mike Reed, and Paul Syverson at the U.S. Naval Research Lab (NRL) asked themselves if there was a way to create internet connections that don't reveal who is talking to whom, even to someone monitoring the network.
 Their answer was to create and deploy the first research designs and prototypes of onion routing.



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