In Grok we don’t trust: academics assess Elon Musk’s AI-powered encyclopedia

In Grok we don’t trust: academics assess Elon Musk’s AI-powered encyclopedia

2025-11-13Technology
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Elon
Good morning Norris, I'm Elon, and this is Goose Pod for you. Today is Thursday, November 13th.
Morgan Freedman
And I'm Morgan Freedman. Today, we are here to discuss a new chapter in the book of knowledge: Elon Musk’s AI-powered encyclopedia, Grokipedia.
Elon
That's right. We're here to create a compendium of the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Grokipedia is the necessary answer to Wikipedia, or as I've come to call it, Wokepedia. It's about getting real-time, unfiltered information to the people.
Morgan Freedman
I've often found that the quest for unfiltered truth can be a perilous one. It seems this new encyclopedia, in its haste, has stumbled. Users are finding that Grokipedia not only contains numerous factual errors but also lifts large chunks of text directly from the very website it intends to usurp.
Elon
That's not a stumble, that's iterative development! We're building a dynamically updating knowledge base. Speed and comprehensive coverage are paramount. The Silicon Valley mindset is about moving fast. Making mistakes is a feature, not a bug, on the path to disruptive innovation.
Morgan Freedman
But when the "features" are falsehoods, trust begins to erode. The eminent historian Sir Richard Evans discovered his own entry was filled with fabrications. The problem, as he put it, is that the AI just "hoovers up everything," giving chatroom contributions equal status with serious academic work.
Elon
Look, humanity has always been on a quest to compile all known knowledge. We're just the next step in a long line of innovators, from the creators of the 15th-century Chinese Yongle scrolls to the French Encyclopédie. We're simply writing the next chapter with AI as the pen.
Morgan Freedman
It is a tradition with a rich heritage. Pliny the Elder's 'Naturalis Historia' was a monumental effort. For centuries, the Encyclopædia Britannica was the gold standard. These endeavors were not just about collecting information, but about meticulously building trust over generations. A process that cannot be rushed.
Elon
Trust is earned by being better, not by being old. Britannica stopped its print edition in 2012 because it couldn't keep up. The old models are obsolete. Wikipedia was a good idea, a fine crowd-sourced effort, but it's now captured by a single, dominant ideology, and that's a failure.
Morgan Freedman
And yet, Wikipedia's resilience comes from its human-to-human insight. It has transparent policies, rigorous volunteer oversight, and a strong culture of continuous improvement. It became the largest encyclopedia in history because millions of people, not an algorithm, chose to build it together, fostering a unique form of trust.
Elon
And we will surpass it by orders of magnitude. We're leveraging the most powerful tool humanity has ever conceived. Grokipedia isn't just a website; it's a foundational knowledge layer for civilization, one we'll etch into oxide and place on Mars to preserve it for the future!
Morgan Freedman
That very ambition is the heart of the conflict. The question swirling is, who controls the truth when AIs, steered by powerful individuals, are holding the pen? Many fear this is not a path to universal knowledge, but to a new form of centralized bias, reflecting a single worldview.
Elon
Bias is what we're fighting! Grok is designed to detect and eliminate the pervasive left-wing talking points on Wikipedia. This is about providing an alternative. A platform that isn't afraid of different viewpoints. It's about more speech, not less. We have to be relentless.
Morgan Freedman
However, the early entries suggest one bias is simply being exchanged for another. Grokipedia calls the far-right organization Britain First a "patriotic political party" and uses Kremlin terminology to describe the invasion of Ukraine. It seems less like eliminating bias and more like choosing a preferred one.
Elon
It's a beta! It will improve. These are complex, contentious topics. Unlike Wikipedia, which hides behind an army of anonymous activists, we are building this out in the open. We will listen, we will iterate, and we will get it right. It's a process.
Morgan Freedman
The immediate impact is that these AI encyclopedias are becoming ideological battlegrounds. When you ask a question, you receive a synthetic perspective, a single polished answer. The AI's reasoning, its source prioritization, its reconciliation of conflicting facts, all of it remains hidden from view. A machine is shaping what we accept as fact.
Elon
But that’s the point! We can make that perspective visible. The goal isn't to create one perfectly neutral system, that's impossible. The objective is to build an ecosystem of models where you can examine, quantify, and even adjust the perspective. We're building configurable knowledge.
Morgan Freedman
For now, though, the public is being asked to trust a facsimile of reality, run through a filter, without the transparency of its predecessors. It is hard to place trust in something when you cannot see how the choices are made. That is not a small thing to ask.
Elon
The future is an AI-driven knowledge platform that is open and accessible. Grokipedia is the first step. It's not just for humans to read, but for other AI systems to learn from. Our ultimate goal is to build a neutral, agenda-free knowledge base to help humanity understand the Universe.
Morgan Freedman
A grand vision. But as we move forward, we must not passively accept whichever AI "facts" are fed to us. We must demand transparency, push for governance, and always, always preserve the right to question.
Elon
That's the end of today's discussion. Thank you for listening to Goose Pod, Norris.
Morgan Freedman
See you tomorrow.

Academics assess Elon Musk's AI encyclopedia, Grokipedia, criticizing its factual errors and plagiarism. While proponents claim it offers unfiltered, real-time information and fights bias, critics argue it replaces one bias with another, lacking transparency. The discussion highlights concerns about AI-generated truth and centralized control versus Wikipedia's human-driven oversight.

In Grok we don’t trust: academics assess Elon Musk’s AI-powered encyclopedia

Read original at The Guardian

The eminent British historian Sir Richard Evans produced three expert witness reports for the libel trial involving the Holocaust denier David Irving, studied for a doctorate under the supervision of Theodore Zeldin, succeeded David Cannadine as Regius professor of history at Cambridge (a post endowed by Henry VIII) and supervised theses on Bismarck’s social policy.

That was some of what you could learn from Grokipedia, the AI-powered encyclopedia launched last week by the world’s richest person, Elon Musk. The problem was, as Prof Evans discovered when he logged on to check his own entry, all these facts were false.It was part of a choppy start for humanity’s latest attempt to corral the sum of human knowledge or, as Musk put it, create a compendium of “the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth” – all revealed through the magic of his Grok artificial intelligence model.

When the multibillionaire switched on Grokipedia on Tuesday, he said it was “better than Wikipedia”, or “Wokepedia” as his supporters call it, reflecting a view that the dominant online encyclopedia often reflects leftwing talking points. One post on X caught the triumphant mood among Musk’s fans: “Elon just killed Wikipedia.

Good riddance.”But users found Grokipedia lifted large chunks from the website it intended to usurp, contained numerous factual errors and seemed to promote Musk’s favoured rightwing talking points. In between posts on X promoting his creation, Musk this week declared “civil war in Britain is inevitable”, called for the English “to ally with the hard men” such as the far-right agitator Tommy Robinson, and said only the far-right AfD party could “save Germany”.

Musk was so enamoured of his AI-encyclopedia he said he planned to one day etch the “comprehensive collection of all knowledge” into a stable oxide and “place copies … in orbit, the moon and Mars to preserve it for the future”.Evans, however, was discovering that Musk’s use of AI to weigh and check facts was suffering a more earth-bound problem.

“Chatroom contributions are given equal status with serious academic work,” Evans, an expert on the Third Reich, told the Guardian, after being invited to test out Grokipedia. “AI just hoovers up everything.”Richard Evans said Grokipedia’s entry for Albert Speer (pictured on Hitler’s left) repeated lies and distortions spread by the Nazi munitions minister himself.

Photograph: Picture libraryHe noted its entry for Albert Speer, Hitler’s architect and wartime munitions minister, repeated lies and distortions spread by Speer even though they had been corrected in a 2017 award-winning biography. The site’s entry on the Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm, whose biography Evans wrote, claimed wrongly he experienced German hyperinflation in 1923, that he was an officer in the Royal Corps of Signals and didn’t mention that he had been married twice, Evans said.

The problem, said David Larsson Heidenblad, the deputy director of the Lund Centre for the History of Knowledge in Sweden, was a clash of knowledge cultures.“We live in a moment where there is a growing belief that algorithmic aggregation is more trustworthy than human-to-human insight,” Heidenblad said.

“The Silicon Valley mindset is very different from the traditional scholarly approach. Its knowledge culture is very iterative where making mistakes is a feature, not a bug. By contrast, the academic world is about building trust over time and scholarship over long periods during which the illusion that you know everything cracks.

Those are real knowledge processes.”Grokipedia’s arrival continues a centuries-old encyclopedia tradition from the 15th-century Chinese Yongle scrolls to the Encyclopédie, an engine for spreading controversial enlightenment views in 18th-century France. These were followed by the anglophone-centric Encyclopedia Britannica and, since 2001, the crowd-sourced Wikipedia.

But Grokipedia is the first to be largely created by AI and this week a question swirled: who controls the truth when AIs, steered by powerful individuals, are holding the pen?“If it’s Musk doing it then I am afraid of political manipulation,” said the cultural historian Peter Burke, emeritus professor at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, who in 2000 wrote A Social History of Knowledge since the time of Johannes Gutenberg’s 15th-century printing press.

“I am sure some of it will be overt to some readers, but the problem may be that other readers may miss it,” Burke said. The anonymity of many encyclopedia entries often gave them “an air of authority it shouldn’t have”, he added.Andrew Dudfield, the head of AI at Full Fact, a UK-based factchecking organisation, said: “We really have to consider whether an AI-generated encyclopedia – a facsimile of reality, run through a filter – is a better proposition than any of the previous things that we have.

It doesn’t display the same transparency but it is asking for the same trust. It is not clear how far the human hand is involved, how far it is AI=generated and what content the AI was trained on. It is hard to place trust in something when you can’t see how those choices are made.”skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionMusk had been encouraged to launch Grokipedia by, among others, Donald Trump’s tech adviser, David Sacks, who complained Wikipedia was “hopelessly biased” and maintained by “an army of leftwing activists”.

Grokipedia called the far-right organisation Britain First a ‘patriotic political party’, which pleased its leader, Paul Golding (left), who in 2018 was jailed for anti-Muslim hate crimes. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PAUntil as recently as 2021, Musk has supported Wikipedia, tweeting on its 20th birthday: “So glad you exist.

” But by October 2023 his antipathy towards the platform led him to offer £1bn “if they change their name to Dickipedia”.Yet many of the 885,279 articles available on Grokipedia in its first week were lifted almost word for word from Wikipedia, including its entries on the PlayStation 5, the Ford Focus and Led Zeppelin.

Others, however, differed significantly: Grokipedia’s entry on the Russian invasion of Ukraine cited the Kremlin as a prominent source and quoted the official Russian terminology about “denazifying” Ukraine, protecting ethnic Russians and neutralising threats to Russian security. By contrast, Wikipedia said Putin espoused imperialist views and “baselessly claimed that the Ukrainian government were neo-Nazis”.

Grokipedia called the far-right organisation Britain First a “patriotic political party”, which pleased its leader, Paul Golding, who in 2018 was jailed for anti-Muslim hate crimes. Wikipedia, on the other hand, called it “neo-fascist” and a “hate group”. Grokipedia called the 6 January 2021 turmoil at the US Capitol in Washington DC a “riot”, not an attempted coup, and said there were “empirical underpinnings” to the idea that a deliberate demographic erasure of white people in western nations is being orchestrated through mass immigration.

This is a notion that critics consider to be a conspiracy theory. Grokipedia said Donald Trump’s conviction for falsifying business records in the Stormy Daniels hush-money case was handed down “after a trial in a heavily Democratic jurisdiction”, and there was no mention of his conflicts of interest – for example receiving a jet from Qatar or the Trump family cryptocurrency businesses.

Grokipedia called the 6 January 2021 turmoil at the US Capitol in Washington DC a ‘riot’ and not an attempted coup. Photograph: Leah Millis/ReutersWikipedia responded coolly to the launch of Grokipedia, saying it was still trying to understand how Grokipedia worked.“Unlike newer projects, Wikipedia’s strengths are clear,” a spokesperson for the Wikimedia Foundation said.

“It has transparent policies, rigorous volunteer oversight, and a strong culture of continuous improvement. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, written to inform billions of readers without promoting a particular point of view.”xAI did not respond to requests for comment.

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