First of all: Be reluctant when you copy text verbatim from elsewhere, specially if it will be the major part of your excerpt or wiki. It is hardly ever the case that content found on the internet is a good fit in tag guidance.
Let's revisit the blog post Redesdigned tags page by J. Atwood.
Reading that the goal of tags roughly comes down to:
Tags are the de-facto map of allowed [...] topics on your site. Reliable tag cartography is essential to navigation and exploration.
With that said let's go over the bullets mentioned in that same blog post and see how your excerpt and wiki do.
The excerpt is the elevator pitch for the tag
You could argue the sales blurb found in the read me is a good pitch but what we are looking for is the pitch for the tag on Stack Overflow. We have different goals and a different focus. If you're about to ask a question you're already familiar with the concept the tag is about. You need to offer guidance if the specific question is a good fit.
Avoid generically defining the concept behind a tag, unless it is highly specialized.
A tag is not documentation although it can have guidance to prevent that questions get asked or that questions have enough substance to be answerable. Explaining what native-fs is not key here. What might be relevant is which browser is being used, maybe which OS. Maybe there are debugging / diagnosing tools that are helpful in providing info for users that want to answer.
Concentrate on what a tag means to your community
In the tag wiki and if possible the excerpt you need to convey why and how questions and their answers matter in the scope of the site. Your excerpt and wiki don't address that aspect.
Provide basic guidance on when to use the tag.
Not all questions might be on-topic. And some questions better go with additional tags. Examples are regex questions which might benefit with an additional tag to indicate which language or regex-flavor is used. Similar for sql where knowing if we talk about mysql or oracle matters. That is crucial info to add to the wiki. It is lacking from your first revision.
Some tags are common knowledge.
This bullet is not applicable here. It argues that you don't have to explain common known tags. I don't think we are all yet on the same page when it comes to this native filesystem stuff for browsers. Leaving the wiki or excerpt empty is bad advice in this case.
TL;DR
We need a substantial different excerpt and tag wiki. Do not think as if you need to sell the tag. Instead assume you write a recipe for the perfect question. The excerpt gets us excited, the wiki takes us through the steps to create awesome content for easy consumption.