Grokipedia’s Challenge: Truth vs. Trust

The Grokipedia encyclopedia, created by Elon Musk’s company xAI, contains thousands of links to “questionable” and “problematic” sources. Analysts at Cornell University reached this conclusion after examining hundreds of thousands of articles from the project, which was launched in April as a competitor to Wikipedia.

“The rules for source verification in Grokipedia are almost non-existent,” write report authors Harold Triedman and Alexios Mantzarlis. “This leads to the inclusion of unreliable materials, especially in articles about politics and government officials.” For example, an article about the “Clinton Deaths” conspiracy theory cites InfoWars, a resource known for spreading disinformation. Other publications quote far-right media from the US and India, state media from China and Iran, as well as sites promoting pseudoscience, anti-Semitism, and anti-Muslim sentiments.

According to the study, Grokipedia articles not copied from Wikipedia are 3.2 times more likely to use sources considered “unreliable” by the English-language Wikipedia community. Additionally, they are 13 times more likely to contain links to resources banned by Wikipedia for rule violations.

Grokipedias Challenge Truth
Illustration: Sora

In response to an AFP request, xAI sent an automated message: “Legacy media lie.” Musk, who invested hundreds of millions of dollars in Donald Trump’s election campaign, previously stated that the goal of Grokipedia is “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” Last week, he announced plans to rename the project Encyclopedia Galactica once the service becomes “good enough.”

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, in an interview with the BBC Science Focus podcast, rejected accusations of left-liberal bias, calling them “factually incorrect.” “Unlike Grokipedia, where content is AI-generated without transparency, Wikipedia’s processes are open to scrutiny, with sources meticulously documented,” emphasized Selena Deckelmann, Chief Technical Officer of the Wikimedia Foundation.

Grokipedia, positioned as an “objective alternative,” showcases the risks of automated content without strict source control. Experts note that Wikipedia’s open model, where edits and sources are reviewed by the community, remains a benchmark for creating neutral encyclopedias. xAI has not yet disclosed how they plan to address the source quality issue.

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