Wikipedia Is the Last Best Place on the Internet – WIRED
The site's innovations have always been cultural rather than computational. It was created using existing technology. This remains the single most underestimated and misunderstood aspect of the project: its emotional architecture. Wikipedia is built on the personal interests and idiosyncrasies of its contributors; in fact, without getting gooey, you could even say it is built on love. Editors' passions can drive the site deep into inconsequential territoryexhaustive detailing of dozens of different kinds of embroidery software, lists dedicated to bespectacled baseball players, a brief but moving biographical sketch of Khanzir, the only pig in Afghanistan. No knowledge is truly useless, but at its best, Wikipedia weds this ranging interest to the kind of pertinence where Larry David's Pretty, pretty good! is given as an example of rhetorical epizeuxis. At these moments, it can feel like one of the few parts of the internet that is improving.
One challenge in seeing Wikipedia clearly is that the favored point of comparison for the site is still, in 2020, Encyclopedia Britannica. Not even the online Britannica, which is still kicking, but the print version, which ceased publication in 2012. If you encountered the words Encyclopedia Britannica recently, they were likely in a discussion about Wikipedia. But when did you last see a physical copy of these books? After months of reading about Wikipedia, which meant reading about Britannica, I finally saw the paper encyclopedia in person. It was on the sidewalk, being thrown away. The 24 burgundy-bound volumes had been stacked with care, looking regal before their garbage-truck funeral. If bought new in 1965, each of them would have cost $10.50the equivalent of $85, adjusted for inflation. Today, they are so unsalable that thrift stores refuse them as donations.
Wikipedia and Britannica do, at least, share a certain lineage. The idea of building a complete compendium of human knowledge has existed for centuries, and there was always talk of finding some better substrate than paper: H. G. Wells thought microfilm might be the key to building what he called the World Brain; Thomas Edison bet on wafer-thin slices of nickel. But for most people who were alive in the earliest days of the internet, an encyclopedia was a book, plain and simple. Back then, it made sense to pit Wikipedia and Britannica against each other. It made sense to highlight Britannica's strengthsits rigorous editing and fact-checking procedures; its roster of illustrious contributors, including three US presidents and a host of Nobel laureates, Academy Award winners, novelists, and inventorsand to question whether amateurs on the internet could create a product even half as good. Wikipedia was an unknown quantity; the name for what it did, crowdsourcing, didn't even exist until 2005, when two WIRED editors coined the word.
Wikipedia is built on the personal interests and idiosyncrasies of its contributors. You could even say it is built on love.
That same year, the journal Nature released the first major head-to-head comparison study. It revealed that, for articles on science, at least, the two resources were nearly comparable: Britannica averaged three minor mistakes per entry, while Wikipedia averaged four. (Britannica claimed almost everything about the journal's investigation was wrong and misleading, but Nature stuck by its findings.) Nine years later, a working paper from Harvard Business School found that Wikipedia was more left-leaning than Britannicamostly because the articles tended to be longer and so were likelier to contain partisan code words. But the bias came out in the wash. The more revisions a Wikipedia article had, the more neutral it became. On a per-word basis, the researchers wrote, the political bent hardly differs.
But some important differences don't readily show up in quantitative, side-by-side comparisons. For instance, there's the fact that people tend to read Wikipedia daily, whereas Britannica had the quality of fine china, as much a display object as a reference work. The edition I encountered by the roadside was in suspiciously good shape. Although the covers were a little wilted, the spines were uncracked and the pages immaculatetelltale signs of 50 years of infrequent use. And as I learned when I retrieved as many volumes as I could carry home, the contents are an antidote for anyone waxing nostalgic.
I found the articles in my '65 Britannica mostly high quality and high minded, but the tone of breezy acumen could become imprecise. The section on Brazil's education system, for instance, says it is good or bad depending on which statistics one takes and how they are interpreted. Almost all the articles are authored by white men, and some were already 30 years out of date when they were published. Noting this half-life in 1974, the critic Peter Prescott wrote that encyclopedias are like loaves of bread: the sooner used, the better, for they are growing stale before they even reach the shelf. The Britannica editors took half a century to get on board with cinema; in the 1965 edition, there is no entry on Luis Buuel, one of the fathers of modern film. You can pretty much forget about television. Lord Byron, meanwhile, commands four whole pages. (This conservative tendency wasn't limited to Britannica. Growing up, I remember reading the entry on dating in a hand-me-down World Book and being baffled by its emphasis on sharing milkshakes.)
The worthies who wrote these entries, moreover, didn't come cheap. According to an article in The Atlantic from 1974, Britannica contributors earned 10 cents per word, on averageabout 50 cents in today's money. Sometimes they got a full encyclopedia set as a bonus. They apparently didn't show much gratitude for this compensation; the editors complained of missed deadlines, petulant behavior, lazy mistakes, and outright bias. People in the arts all fancy themselves good writers, and they gave us the most difficult time, one editor told The Atlantic. At Britannica rates, the English-language version of Wikipedia would cost $1.75 billion to produce.
There was another seldom remembered limitation to these gospel tomes: They were, in a way, shrinking. The total length of paper encyclopedias remained relatively finite, but the number of facts in the universe kept growing, leading to attrition and abbreviation. It was a zero-sum game in which adding new articles meant deleting or curtailing incumbent information. Even the most noteworthy were not immune; between 1965 and 1989, Bach's Britannica entry shrank by two pages.
By the time the internet came into being, a limitless encyclopedia was not just a natural idea but an obvious one. Yet there was still a senseeven among the pioneers of the webthat, although the substrate was new, the top-down, expert-driven Britannica model should remain in place.
Original post:
Wikipedia Is the Last Best Place on the Internet - WIRED
- Forum From the Archives: Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales on How to Build Trust - KQED - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Wikipedia debating if attack targeting Jews at Sydney Chanukah event was terror - JNS.org - December 18th, 2025 [December 18th, 2025]
- Provisional Bondi Truths: Containment, Power, and the Struggle to Name Palestine on Wikipedia - Countercurrents - December 18th, 2025 [December 18th, 2025]
- Wikipedia | Wikipedia in the Age of AI and Bots - Stanford HAI - December 18th, 2025 [December 18th, 2025]
- Can we still trust Wikipedia? - GZERO Media - December 18th, 2025 [December 18th, 2025]
- Does this Wikipedia listing show 'Scooby-Doo' characters were based on real '60s leftist group? - Snopes - December 18th, 2025 [December 18th, 2025]
- Jannik Sinner repeats feat: leader in Wikipedia searches in Italy for the second consecutive year - Punto de Break - December 18th, 2025 [December 18th, 2025]
- Elon Musk versus Wikipedia continues an age-old battle over truth - Prospect Magazine - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Wikipedia is getting in on the yearly wrapped game - The Verge - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Wikipedia Has Its Own Version of Wrapped Now, But Theres One Little Problem - Gizmodo - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- AYENI: Your teachers were wrong about Wikipedia - The Vanderbilt Hustler - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Pope Leo XIV among the most viewed and searched on Wikipedia and Google in 2025 - Catholic News Agency - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Wikipedia Rolls Out Spotify Wrapped-Style End-of-Year Recap - PCMag - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Wikipedia Launches Personal 'Wrapped' Feature to Boost App Downloads - The Tech Buzz - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Heres the top 20 list of most-viewed Wikipedia articles in 2025 - FOX 8 News - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Wikipedia announces Pope Leo XIV as their 5th most-read profile of 2025 - Rome Reports - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- The Ultimate Wikipedia Footballer Quiz II: Another bumper edition to test your 2000s baller knowledge - Planet Football - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Charlie Kirks wikipedia becomes most-read page of 2025 since assassination - WION - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Quit the begging Wikipedia - vocal.media - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- What were the most-read articles on Wikipedia in 2025? - Euronews.com - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- This years hottest Wikipedia pages from Charlie Kirk to Severance - PCWorld - December 10th, 2025 [December 10th, 2025]
- Elon Musks Anti-Woke Wikipedia Is Calling Hitler The Fhrer - The Intercept - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- 50 Times People Found Gems On Wikipedia That Were Too Funny Not To Share (New Pics) - Bored Panda - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- For Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, truth has always been a matter of trust | The Excerpt - USA Today - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- How does the Wikimedia Foundation use donations to Wikipedia? - Wikimedia Foundation - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- The Interview: How Wikipedia Is Responding to the Culture Wars - The New York Times - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- For Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, truth is a matter of trust - USA Today - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- ShellBot Chat: How to Edit History The Wikipedia Way - Royal Dutch Shell Plc .com - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- Grok, is this true? Can Elon Musk's Grokipedia compete with Wikipedia? - Mezha - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- The best guide to spotting AI writing comes from Wikipedia - TechCrunch - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- The difference between Grokipedia and Wikipedia - marketplace.org - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- 27 Wikipedia Pages So Disturbing They're For Adults Only - BuzzFeed - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales blows his top and hits da bricks 45 seconds into an interview, shouting 'It's a stupid question!' as he walks offstage -... - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- Wikipedia Cracks the Code on Spotting AI Writing - The Tech Buzz - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- Elon Musk, Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales is not pleased with your Wikipedia rival; says: Pretty skepti - Times of India - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- As Wikipedia Traffic Drops 8%, Experts Say Its Time to Rethink SEO and GEO - DesignRush - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- I Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really Regret Looking At These Creepy Wikipedia Pages -... - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- Jimmy Wales walks out of interview over dumbest Wikipedia question: Its not a - Times of India - November 20th, 2025 [November 20th, 2025]
- Wikipedia is facing attacks from the White House and Musk. Its founder isn't worried - NPR - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- We tried Elon Musks Wikipedia clone. Its as racist as youd expect - The Sydney Morning Herald - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- We tried Elon Musks Wikipedia clone. Its as racist as youd expect - The Sydney Morning Herald - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Ranked: The Most Viewed Wikipedia Pages of 2025 (So Far) - Visual Capitalist - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Ranked: The Most Viewed Wikipedia Pages of 2025 (So Far) - Visual Capitalist - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- I Fell Into The Darkest Parts Of Wikipedia And I Want A Refund - BuzzFeed - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- I Fell Into The Darkest Parts Of Wikipedia And I Want A Refund - BuzzFeed - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- How Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales may have agreed with Elon Musk that Wikipedia is 'biased' - The Times of India - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- We tried Elon Musks Wikipedia clone. Its as racist as youd expect - The Age - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- INSEAD launches Botipedia, an AI-created encyclopedic knowledge portal that claims to be 6,000 times larger than Wikipedia - EdTech Innovation Hub - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- I tried Elon Musk's Wikipedia clone and boy is it racist - SFGATE - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Elon Musk? AI? Crazy left-wing activists? The main who built Wikipedia explains its biggest threats - BBC Science Focus Magazine - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Musk version of Wikipedia takes different tack on climate - E&E News by POLITICO - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- I tried Grokipedia. It has something to teach Wikipedia about AI. - Business Insider - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Step aside, Wikipedia; its Grok to the future - Washington Times - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- AI answers are taking a bite of Wikipedia's traffic. Should we be worried for the site? - Business Insider - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Wikipedia sends 'note' to everyone on the internet as it takes on Elon Musk's Grokipedia - The Times of India - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- What Elon Musks Version of Wikipedia Thinks About Hitler, Putin, and Apartheid - The Atlantic - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- I tried Grokipedia, the AI-powered anti-Wikipedia. Here's why neither is foolproof - ZDNET - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Why Wikipedia Is Losing Traffic to AI Overviews on Google - CNET - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Grokipedia vs Wikipedia: How Elon Musk's AI-generated encyclopaedia holds up against the left-leaning cro - The Times of India - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- WIKIPEDIA CO-FOUNDER: WIKIPEDIA WILL BE LEFT IN THE DUST BY GROKIPEDIA" Ex-founder of Wikipedia, Larry Sanger: "The neat thing that theyre... - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- How AI could soon be used by Wikipedia, according to its founder - BBC Science Focus Magazine - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Grokipedia Is the Antithesis of Everything That Makes Wikipedia Good, Useful, and Human - 404 Media - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Seth Meyers Drags Trump for Having an Entire Wikipedia Page Dedicated to His Handshake Technique | Video - TheWrap - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Elon Musk Launches AI-Powered Rival to Wikipedia and Its Already Been Accused of Copying Wiki Pages - People.com - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Wikipedia says AI answers are starting to take a bite. There are reasons to be worried. - Yahoo News Canada - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- What Wikipedia and Grokipedia are saying about each other - KGOU - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- I pitted Wikipedia against Elon Musks new Grokipedia heres which one gave the better answers - Tom's Guide - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Explained | What is Grokipedia, Musk's AI alternative to human-edited Wikipedia - Deccan Herald - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- AI still cant beat Wikipedia when it comes to integrity - The Observer - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Elon Musk's 'Grokipedia' cites Wikipedia as a source, even though it's the exact thing he's trying to replace because he thinks it's 'woke' - Fortune - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- WIKIPEDIA TRIED TO ROAST GROKIPEDIA AND COOKED ITS OWN CREDIBILITY In a new fundraising pop-up, Wikipedia throws shade at Grokipedia, bragging it's... - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Elon Musk wants to dethrone Wikipedia with Grokipedia - MSN - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Grokipedia: Far right talking points or much-needed antidote to Wikipedia? - TradingView - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Hi, Its Me, Wikipedia, and I Am Ready for Your Apology - McSweeneys Internet Tendency - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Watch Wikipedia Founder Wales Explores Trust in the Digital Age - Bloomberg.com - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- He co-founded Wikipedia. Now hes inspiring Elon Musk to build a rival. - Yahoo - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- 'An astonishing situation': Wikipedia co-founder bashes Trump's latest attacks on trust - rawstory.com - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Trust and empathy should be baked into tech from the start, says Wikipedia co-founder - marketplace.org - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Elon Musks Grokipedia copying Wikipedia? Here's all you need to know about the AI-powered encyclopedia - The Economic Times - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Explained: What is Elon Musks Grokipedia and how it differs from Wikipedia - The Federal - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]