this post was submitted on 23 Jan 2026
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It's a perpetual two-edged conversation. On the one end, you've got reactionaries doggedly insisting the existence of Wikipedia is an attack on their personal reputations and a warehouse for far-left ultra-communist radical propaganda. On the other, you've got a very naked western bias to articles (thanks to a preponderance of western editors) and this creeping pay-to-play model of participation that enthusiasts and supporters simply refuse to acknowledge.
The utility of the site is such that nobody is really excited about ignoring it and replacing it is a herculean effort even would-be trillionaires haven't managed. So the fight continues to be over degrees of control in editing existing articles and publishing new ones.
It isn't a White Tower, but Wikipedia has become - like it or not - a system of record with an implicit amount of reflexive trust that hundreds of millions of people have learned to adopt. You can't cynically reject its contents any more than you can naively accept them.
I think there are enough copies of the Mona Lisa such that we wouldn't need to question what it looks like if the original was stolen.
In the same way, there are so many backups and mirrors and third-party logs of Wikipedia that we can very clearly see what is being changed and by whom. It is valuable in large part because it is so easily auditable. That's not to say its infallible, but you can at least point to what you disagree with and challenge it piecemeal. This isn't like a Grok AI or Conservapedia, where the preponderance is a black box of bullshit.