10/30/2025 The Rise and Fall of
Wikipedia Jeffrey A. Tucker
The year was 2001, and the dot-com bust was in the rearview mirror. New
ideas were in circulation among young and visionary entrepreneurs. Sure,
pets.com and so many others failed, but
that was a temporary boom–bust.
The internet will change everything eventually, we were told. Technology,
decentralization, crowdsourcing, and digital spontaneity will create an
information landscape without gatekeepers. Everything will have to adapt.
The experts of the old world will be replaced by a people’s revolution.
Whereas legacy elites waved credentials, a new class of revolutionaries
will raise armies of servers and digits to move the center of
civilization to the cloud.
Wikipedia was a headline feature, an experiment in crowdsourcing
knowledge in a way that was decentralized, able to scale in ways the old
model was not, and drawing from the knowledge and passions of people the
world over. The platform seemed to embody the principle of freedom
itself. Everyone has a voice. The truth will emerge from the seeming
chaos of competing points of view.
At long last, the anti-authoritarian outlook would be tested on a medium
that had intrigued scholars since the ancient world: books containing all
knowledge. Reading through Aristotle’s vast corpus, you find this passion
and drive at work. He wanted to document everything he could about the
world around him. Centuries later, following the fall of Rome, St.
Isidor, archbishop of Seville, embarked upon a similar path. With the
help of countless scribes, he spent his life writing
“
Etymologiae,” a massive treatise on all that was known, compiled from
AD 615 to 630.
As publishing with movable type took hold in the 15th and 16th centuries,
the first similar work appeared in 1630: Johann Heinrich Alsted’s
“
Encyclopaedia Septem Tomis Distincta.” When, by the late 19th
century, book publishing and distribution were democratized by markets
and technology and middle-class households could obtain real libraries,
the encyclopedia set became a huge commercial success. Many companies
were involved in making and selling them.
After World War II, it became common for every household to have a set on
the shelfor several. They provided endless fascination for everyone, a
reference tool for learning for all ages. One of the more salient
memories of my own childhood was opening them randomly and reading as
much as I could on pretty much any imaginable topic. I spent countless
hours with these magical books.
Encyclopedias drew from the best expertsbut always with gatekeepers to
decide what was and was not credible information. The top editorial
position at World Book, Britannica, or Funk & Wagnalls was a powerful
place to be professionally. He could decide what was and was not true,
who was and was not an expert, and what people did and did not need to
know.
When Murray Rothbard had finished his graduate studies at Columbia
University and before he had a teaching position, he was looking for ways
to bring in income. As a trained economic historian, he attempted to send
in three entries to an encyclopedia company. The essays were promptly
rejected simply because his take was different from the mainstream
consensusnever mind that what he wrote was true.
This is the problem with gatekeepers. So long as printing remained the
main means by which knowledge was preserved and distributed, they would
be necessary.
The founding of Wikipedia in 2001 was about a vision to change that. The
initial reaction was widespread and justifiable incredulity. It could
never work for anyone to be able to change anything, so they said. It’s
not possible simply to wipe away the gatekeepers and for truth to emerge.
For years, this perception dominated, as teachers and experts of all
sorts spoke of Wikipedia only with disdain.
But gradually, something interesting began to happen. It actually seemed
to be working. The entries became ever more voluminous and detailed. The
rules of the road became more embedded, so that citations and
documentation were required, and interest groups rallied around
particular entries to guard them against corruption. Sure, anyone can
edit, but your edits will be reversed immediately if you are not in
compliance. For many entries, it became essentially impossible to change
them without first going to the discussion pages and asking
permission.
Already early on, new gatekeepers emerged on the platform. How did they
become that way? Through persistence, skill at Wiki code, deep knowledge
of the platform, and a native ability to understand the culture of the
platform. For a time, this only increased the credibility of the
platform. As the proof of concept became ever more visible and obvious,
it began to rank ever higher in search results. At some uncertain point,
the critics quieted down, and Wikipedia triumphed.
Were its earliest champions correct? Did the model of spontaneous
evolution actually generate a better product than the old top-down
system? In many ways, it did. In other ways, it did not. Wikipedia
brandished crowdsource credibilitythis is what the community has decided
to be truewhile giving rise to a new opinion oligarchy that was as bad
or worse than what it replaced.
The targeting of the platform started right away. The topic was science,
global warming in particular. One of the founders, Larry Sanger,
noted that this was happening early on. Some sources were deemed
inadmissible, while others were valorized as excellent for citation. The
topic, in particular, was fraught with the problem of epistemological
capture. The grants flowed to those pushing conventional narratives who
were, in turn, published in the major journals, while dissidents were
shoved aside and even tossed out of professional societies. Wikipedia
perfectly manifested the same problem.
The whole point of Wikipedia was to permit crowdsourcing to break down
traditional information cartels. In this case, and ever more as the years
went on, the cartels had reassembled themselves.
At least with old-style encyclopedias, readers knew the names of both the
authors of entries and the editors. They signed what they wrote. With
Wikipedia, 85 percent of the most powerful editors remained entirely
anonymous. This turned out to be a grave problem. It permitted powerful
industries, foreign governments, deep-state agents, and anyone with the
highest stake in a topic to control the messaging while banishing
contrary points of view.
As politics became ever more contentious, Wikipedia, in general, went the
way of mainstream media with a consistently mainline center-left bias on
any topic that affected political outlook. After Trump won in 2016, the
entire platform was swept up in the hate that followed. Editors made
lists of credible and not-credible sources, thus banning any
right-of-center media from being cited in the interest of balance.
Indeed, balance disappeared entirely.
The COVID-19 period proved that it was too far gone to be saved. Every
entry echoed Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and World Health
Organization propaganda, and even the entry on masks advanced the most
preposterous claims. The material on the COVID-19 vaccines might as well
have been written by industry (and probably was). If you were looking for
something objectiveperhaps some common sense on dealing with a
respiratory infectionthe search was hopeless.
The platform had been fully captured during the greatest crisis of our
lives. It was far worse than an older encyclopedia, which would at least
preserve known information on natural immunity, therapeutics, or
strategies used in pandemics in the past. Wikipedia was so agile that it
would be edited in real time to delete settled knowledge and replace it
with whatever hullabaloo was being whipped up by industrial bureaucrats
that morning. This was not a digital utopia; this was Orwell come to
life.
The rise of Wikipedia was spectacular, implausible, and glorious. Its
fall is equally disappointing, predictable, and inglorious. It’s also
paradigmatic. Every major venue failed in its emancipationist promise and
instead became handmaidens of the propagandists and censors: Microsoft,
Google, Facebook, and even Amazon. The information revolution turned
gradually into a tool for shoring up the corporatist–state
system.
The betrayal here serves as a tragic reminder that no technology is
uncorrupted, no method is not subject to abuse, and no platform is
permanently inoculated against capture. Indeed, the more credibility an
institution earns, the more confidence it inspires, the more likely it is
to attract bad actors who will flip its purposes on their head and push
an agenda.
What I’ve reported above is no longer unknown. Most people today are
aware of Wikipedia’s biases. Regular people long ago gave up trying to
save it from itself. You can spend a half-day on a small edit and see it
reversed by the nameless editorial oligarchs who guard every entry that
is even slightly controversial. Instead of broadening and including
voices, it has narrowed and excluded them.
Fortunately, the wheels of technology have kept turning. Artificial
intelligence dropped in the late COVID-19 period, and at least one
company, xAI, has devoted itself to providing the best tools to keep the
dream of democratized information alive.
Grokipedia, even in its first
iteration, is already leagues above Wikipedia in balance and range of
information sources. As it turns out, machines do a better job than
anonymous oligarchs at getting us close to the truth.
Welcome to the post-Wikipedia age. It was fun while it lasted. All hail
its deprecation and replacement with something much better.