Lex Fridman Podcast - #385 – Jimmy Wales: Wikipedia
Episode Date: June 19, 2023Jimmy Wales is the co-founder of Wikipedia. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Hexclad Cookware: https://hexclad.com/lex and use code LEX to get 10% off - Eight Sleep: https:/.../www.eightsleep.com/lex to get special savings - House of Macadamias: https://houseofmacadamias.com/lex and use code LEX to get 20% off your first order Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/jimmy-wales-transcript EPISODE LINKS: Jimmy's Twitter: https://twitter.com/jimmy_wales Jimmy's Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Wales Donate to Wikipedia: https://donate.wikimedia.org WT.Social: https://wt.social/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (05:10) - Origin story of Wikipedia (11:14) - Design of Wikipedia (18:07) - Number of articles on Wikipedia (24:18) - Wikipedia pages for living persons (45:11) - ChatGPT (58:42) - Wikipedia's political bias (1:04:46) - Conspiracy theories (1:17:51) - Facebook (1:26:09) - Twitter (1:46:45) - Building Wikipedia (2:01:18) - Wikipedia funding (2:12:38) - ChatGPT vs Wikipedia (2:17:19) - Larry Sanger (2:22:51) - Twitter files (2:25:43) - Government and censorship (2:40:07) - Adolf Hitler's Wikipedia page (2:51:49) - Future of Wikipedia (3:03:51) - Advice for young people (3:11:13) - Meaning of life
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Jimmy Wales, co-founder of Wikipedia, one of, if not the most
impactful websites ever, expanding the collective knowledge, intelligence, and wisdom of human civilization.
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And now, dear friends, here's Jimmy Wales. Let's start at the beginning.
What is the origin story of Wikipedia?
The origin story of Wikipedia.
Well, I was watching the growth of the free software movement, open source software, and
seeing programmers coming together to collaborate in new ways, sharing code, doing that under free license, which is really interesting,
because it empowers an ability to work together. That's really hard to do if the code is still
proprietary, because then if I chip in and help, we sort of have to figure out how I'm going to
be rewarded and what that is, but the idea that everyone can copy it and it just is part of the commons really
empowered a huge wave of creative software production.
And I realized that that kind of collaboration could extend beyond just software to all
kinds of cultural works.
And the first thing that I thought of was an Encyclopedia.
I thought, no, that seems obvious.
That encyclopedia you can collaborate on it.
There's a few reasons why.
One, we all pretty much know what encyclopedia entry on,
say, the Eiffel Tower should be like.
You know, you should see a picture, a few pictures,
maybe history, location, something about the architect,
et cetera, et cetera.
So we have a shared understanding of what it is we're trying to do, and then we can collaborate
and different people can ship in and find sources and so on and so forth.
So set up first, Newpedia, which was about two years before Wikipedia.
And with Newpedia, we had this idea that in order to be respected, we had this idea
that in order to be respected,
we had to be even more academic than a traditional
incyclopedia because a bunch of volunteers on the internet
getting out of the right, in acyclopedia,
you could be made fun of if it's just every random person.
So we had implemented this seven stage review process
to get anything published.
And two things came of that. So one thing, one of the earliest entries that we published after
this rigorous process, a few days later, we had to pull it because as soon as it hit the web and
the broader community took a look at it, people noticed plagiarism and realized that it wasn't actually
that good, even though it had been reviewed by academics and so on. So we had to pull it so it's like, okay, well, so much for
seven stage review process. But also, I decided that I wanted to try. I was frustrated,
and why is this taking so long? Why is it so hard? So I thought, okay, I saw that Robert
Merton had won Nobel Prize in Economics for his work on Option Pricing Theory.
When I was in academia, that's what I worked on.
It was Option Pricing Theory, had a published paper.
I'd worked through all of his academic papers, and I knew his work quite well.
I thought, I'll write a short biography of Merton.
When I started to do it, I'd been out of academia,
had been a grad student for a few years then.
I felt this huge intimidation
because they were gonna take my draft
and send it to the most prestigious finance professors
that we could find to give me feedback for revisions.
And it felt like being back in grad school.
It's like this really oppressive sort of like,
you're gonna submit it for review
and you're gonna get critiques.
A little bit of the bad part of grad.
Yeah, yeah, the bad part of grad school, right?
And so I was like, oh, this isn't intellectually fun.
This is like the bad part of grad school.
It's intimidating.
And there's a lot of, you know, potential embarrassment if I screw something up and so forth.
And so that was when I realized, okay, look, this is never going to work.
This is not something that people are really going to want to do.
So Jeremy Rosenfeld, one of my employees, had brought and showed me the wiki concept in
December and then Larry Sanger brought in the same, said, what about this wiki idea?
And so in January, we decided to launch wiki pedia, but we weren't sure.
So the original project was called new pedia.
And even though it wasn't successful, we did have
quite a group of academics and like really serious people. And we were concerned that, oh, maybe
these academics are going to really hate this idea. And we shouldn't just convert the project
immediately. We should launch this as a side project, the idea of, here's a wiki where we can start
playing around. But actually, we got more work done in two weeks than we had in almost two years because
people were able to just jump on and start doing stuff.
And it was actually a very exciting time.
You could back then you could be the first person who typed Africa is a continent and
hit save, you know, but it isn't much of an encyclopedia entry, but it's true and it's
a start and it's kind of fun.
Like, you know, you put your name down.
Actually, a funny story was several years later,
I just happened to be online and I saw when,
his name is Robert Alman,
won the Nobel Prize in Economics.
And we didn't have an entry on him at all,
which was surprising, but it wasn't that surprising.
This was still early days, you know.
And so I got to be the first person to type,
Robert Alman won Nobel Prize in Economics and hit save,
which, again, wasn't a very good article.
But then I came back two days later and people had improved it and so forth.
So that second half of the experience where with Robert Merton, I never succeeded because
it was just too intimidating.
It was like, oh no, I was able to chip in and help.
Other people jumped in.
Everybody was interested in the topic because it's all in the news at the moment.
So it's just a completely different model which worked much, much better.
What is it that made that so accessible, so fun, so natural to just add something?
Well, I think it's, you know, especially in the early days, and this, by the way, has
gotten much harder because there are fewer topics that are just greenfield, you know, available.
But you know, you could say, oh, well, you know, I know a little bit about this
and I can get it started. But then it is fun to come back then and see other people have
added and improved and so on and so forth. And that idea of collaborating, you know, where
people can much like open source software, you know, you put your code out and then people
suggest revisions and they change it and it modifies and it grows beyond
the original creator
It's just like kind of a fun wonderful
Quite geeky hobby, but
People enjoy it. How much debate was there over the interface over the details?
I'll how to make that well seamless and frictionless. Yeah, I mean not as much as they probably should have been in a way
During that two years of the failure of new pedia,
where very little work got done,
what was actually productive was there was a huge long discussion,
email discussion, very clever people,
talking about things like neutrality,
talking about what is an encyclopedia,
but also talking about more technical ideas,
you know, things back then,
XML was kind of all the rage and thinking about,
ah, could we, you know, shouldn't you have certain data that might be in multiple articles that gets updated automatically?
So, for example, you know, the population of New York City, every 10 years, there's a new official census.
Couldn't you just update that bit of data in one place and it would update across all those.
That is a reality today, but back then it was just like, how do we do that? How do we think about that?
So that is a reality today where there's some universe variables.
Yeah, wiki data.
You can link from a wiki pd entry, you can link to that piece of data in wiki data.
I mean, it's a pretty advanced thing, but there are advanced users who are doing that.
And then when that gets updated,
it updates in all the languages where you've done that.
I mean, that's really interesting.
There was this chain of emails in the early days
of discussing the details of what is,
so there's the interface, there's the,
yeah, so the interface.
So an example, there was some software called
Use Mod Wiki, which we started with.
It's quite amusing actually, because the main reason we launched with UseModWiki is that
it was a single perl script. So it was really easy for me to install it on the server and just
get running. But it was, you know, some guys hobby project, it was cool, but it was just a hobby
project. And all the data was stored in flat text files files so there was no real database behind it.
So to search the site you basically used Grap which is just like basic Unix utility to look
through all the files. So that clearly was never going to scale but also in the early days it didn't
have real logins. So you could set your user name, but there were no passwords.
So, you know, I might say Bob Smith and then someone else comes along and says, no, I'm
Bob Smith and they're both headed. Now that never really happened. We didn't have a problem
with it, but it was kind of obvious. Like, you can't grow a big website where everybody
can pretend to be everybody. That's not going to be good for trust and reputation and
so forth. So quickly, I had to write a little, you know, log in, you know,
store people's passwords and things like that so you could have unique identities. And then
another example of something, you know, quite, you would have never thought would have been a good idea
and it turned out to not be a problem. But to make a link in Wikipedia, in the early days,
you would make a link to a page that may or may not exist by just using camel case, meaning it's
like upper case, lower case, and you smash the words together.
So maybe New York City, he might type any W, no space, capital Y, New York City.
And that would make a link, but that was ugly.
That was clearly not right.
And so I was like, okay, well, that's just not going to look nice.
Let's just use square brackets.
Two square brackets makes a link,
that may have been an option in the software.
I'm gonna show how I thought up square brackets.
But anyway, we just did that, which worked really well.
It makes nice links and you can see in its red links
or blue links depending on if the page exists or not.
But the thing that didn't occur to me even think about
is that, for example, on the German language standard keyboard,
there is no square bracket.
So for German Wikipedia to succeed, people had to learn to do some alt codes to get the
square bracket, or they, a lot of users, cut and paste a square bracket where they could
find one and they would just cut and paste one in.
And yet, German Wikipedia has been a massive success.
So somehow that didn't slow people down.
How is that the German keyboard don't have a square bracket?
How do you do programming?
How do you live life to its fullest with us?
Very good question. I'm not really sure.
I mean, maybe it does now because I have keyboard standards
have drifted over time and becomes useful to have a certain character.
I mean, it's the same thing.
Like, there's not really a W character in Italian.
And it wasn't on keyboards or I think it is now, but in general, W is not a letter in
Italian language, but it appears in enough international words that it's crept into
Italians. And all of these things are probably Wikipedia articles in themselves.
Oh, yeah. The discussion is square brackets.
Whole discussion, I'm sure. On both the English and the German Wikipedia and the difference between those two might be very
Very interesting
So wiki data is fascinating, but even the broader discussion of what is in encyclopedia
And you go to that sort of philosophical question of sure what is what is it? What is in cyclopetia? The way I would put it is an encyclopetia, what our goal is, is the sum of all human knowledge,
but some meaning summary. And this was an early debate. I mean, somebody started uploading
the full text of Hamlet, for example. And we said, wait, hold on a second. That's not an encyclopedia article, but why not? So hence was born wiki source, which is where you put original
text and things like that out of copyright text. Because he said, no, an encyclopedia
article about Hamlet, that's a perfectly valid thing. But the actual text of the play is
not an encyclopedia article. So most of it's fairly obvious, but there are some interesting quirks and differences.
So for example, as I understand it, in French language in cyclopidias, traditionally, it would be
quite common to have recipes, which in English language that would be unusual. You wouldn't find
a recipe for chocolate cake in Britannica. And so I actually don't know the current state. I haven't thought about that
many, many years now, state of cake recipes and Wikipedia in English Wikipedia.
I wouldn't say there's chocolate cake recipes. I mean, you might find a sample recipe somewhere.
I'm not saying they're non, but in general, no, like we wouldn't have recipes. I taught myself,
oh, now I get our region's conversation, but now I'm our region. I'm deeply upset.
It's actually very complicated. I'm, I'm, I love to cook. I'm, I'm, you know, I'm now I'm on a rage. I'm deeply upset. It's actually very complicated. I'm I'm I love to cook. I'm, you know, I'm I'm actually quite a
good cook. And what's interesting is there's it's very hard to have a
neutral recipe because like a canonical recipe for a canonical recipe is
is kind of difficult to come by because there's so many variants and it's all
debatable and interesting. For something like chocolate cake, you could
probably say,
here's one of the earliest recipes,
or here's one of the most common recipes.
But for many, many things, the variants are as interesting.
Somebody said to me recently, 10 Spaniards,
12 piea recipes.
So these are all matters of open discussion.
Well, just to throw some numbers as of May 27th, 2023, there are 6 million, 6.66 million
articles in the English Wikipedia containing over 4.3 billion words, including articles that total number of pages is 58 million.
Does that blow your mind?
I mean, yes, it does.
I mean, it doesn't because I know those numbers and see them from time to time, but in another
sense, a deeper sense.
Yeah, it does.
I mean, it's really remarkable.
I remember when English Wikipedia passed 100,000 articles, and when German Wikipedia passed 100,000 articles and when
German Wikipedia passed 100,000 because I happened to be in Germany with a
bunch of Wikipedia's that night and you know then it seemed quite big. I mean we
knew at that time that it was nowhere near complete. I remember at Wikimania in
Harvard when we did our annual conference there in Boston, someone
who had come to the conference from Poland had brought along with him a small encyclopedia,
single volume encyclopedia of biographies.
So short biographies, normally a paragraph paragraph or so about famous people in Poland and there were some
22,000 entries and he pointed out that even then
2006 Wikipedia felt quite big and he said in English Wikipedia, there's only a handful of these, you know less than 10%
I think he said and so then you realized yeah actually, you know, who was the mayor of Warsaw in
1873? Don't know, probably not in English Wikipedia, but it probably might be today, but there's
so much out there. And of course, what we get into when we're talking about how many entries there are
and how many, you know, how many could there be? is this very deep philosophical issue of notability, which
is the question of, well, how do you draw the limit?
How do you draw what is there?
Sometimes, people say there should be no limit, but I think that doesn't stand up to much
scrutiny if you really pause and think about it.
So I see in your hand there, you've got a big pen, pretty standard. Everybody's seen,
you know, billions of those in life, classic though. It's a classic, clear, big pen. So could we have
an entry about that big pen? I'll, I bet we do. That type of big pen, because it's classic.
Everybody knows it and it's got a history and actually there's something interesting about the
big company. They make pens, they also make kayaks and there's something else about the big company. They make pens, they also make kayaks,
and there's something else they're famous for. Basically, they're sort of a definition by non-essentials company. Anything that's long and plastic, that's what they make.
Wow.
If you want to find the platform of a big.
But could we have an article about that very big pen in your hand?
of a big. But could we have an article about that very big pen in your hand? So Lex Friedman's big pen, I suppose. All of the very, this is a very specific instance. And the answer is, no,
there's not much known about it. I dare say, unless, you know, it's very special to you and your
great grandmother gave it to you or something. You probably know very little about it. It's a pen.
It's just here in the office. So that's just to show there is a limit.
I mean, in German Wikipedia,
they used to talk about the rear nut of the wheel
of Uli Fouque's bicycle, Uli Fouque's the well-known
Wikipedia and of the time to sort of illustrate,
like you can't have an article about literally everything.
And so then it raises the question,
what can you have an article about, what can't you?
And that can vary depending on the subject matter.
One of the areas where we try to be much more careful would be biographies.
The reason is a biography of a living person.
If you get it wrong, it can actually be quite hurtful, quite damaging.
And so if someone is a private person and somebody tries to create a Wikipedia
entry, there's no way to update it. There's not much now. So for example, an encyclopedia
article about my mother, my mother, school teacher, later a pharmacist, wonderful woman,
but never been in the news. I mean, other than me talking about why there shouldn't be
a Wikipedia entry that's probably made it in somewhere, standard example, but you know, there's not enough known.
And you could sort of imagine a database of genealogy having data birth, data death and
you know, certain elements like that of private people, but you couldn't really write a
biography.
And one of the areas this comes up quite often is what we call BLP1A.
We've got lots of acronyms. Bography of a living person who's notable for only one event
is a real sort of danger zone.
And the type of example would be a victim of a crime.
So someone who's a victim of a famous serial killer,
but about whom, like really not much is known.
They weren't a public person. They're just a victim of a crime.
We really shouldn't have an article about that person.
They'll be mentioned, of course, and maybe the specific crime might have an article.
But for that person, no, not really.
That's not really something that makes any sense because how can you write a biography
about someone you don't know much about?
This is, it varies from field to field.
For example, for many academics, we will have an
entry that we might not have in a different context because for an academic, it's important to have
sort of their career, you know, what papers they've published, things like that. You may not know
anything about their personal life, but that's actually not encyclopedically relevant in the same
way that it is for a member of a royal family where it's basically all about the family. So, you know, we're fairly nuanced about
notability and where it comes in. And I've always thought that the term
notability, I think, is a little problematic. I mean, we struggle about how to
talk about it. The problem with notability is it can feel insulting.
So, no, you're not noteworthy.
My mother's noteworthy.
She's a really important person in my life, right?
So, that's not right.
But it's more like verifiability.
Is there a way to get information
that actually makes an encyclopedia entry?
It so happens that there's a Wikipedia page about me
as I've learned recently.
And the first thought I had when I saw that was surely I am not notable enough.
So I was very surprised and grateful that such a page could exist.
And actually just allow me to say thank you to all the incredible people that are part
of creating and maintaining Wikipedia.
It's my favorite website on the internet. The collection of articles that Wikipedia has created
is just incredible. We'll talk about the various details of that, but the love and care that goes
into creating pages for individuals, for big pen, for all this kind of stuff, it's just really incredible.
So I just felt the love when I saw that page.
But I also felt just because I do this podcast, and just through this podcast, I've gotten
to know a few individuals that are quite controversial.
I've gotten to be on the receiving end of something quite, to me as a person who loves other human beings, I've gone to be at the
receiving end of some kind of attacks through the Wikipedia form. Like you said, when you
look at living individuals, it can be quite hurtful. The little details of information. And
because I've become friends with Elon Musk and I've interviewed him, but I've also interviewed
people on the left, far left, people on the right, some people say far right. And so now you take a step,
you put your toe into the cold pool of politics, and the shark emerges from the dubs and pulls you right in. A boiling hot pool of politics.
I guess it's hot.
And so I got to experience some of that.
I think what you also realize is there
has to be for Wikipedia kind of credible sources,
verifiable sources.
And there's a dance there because some of the sources are pieces of journalism.
And of course journalism operates under its own complicated incentives such that people can
write articles that are not factual or are cherry picking all the flaws that you can have in
a journalist's card. And those can be used as sources. It's like they dance hand in hand. And so
For me sadly enough, there was a really kind of concerted attack to say that I was never at MIT
I never did anything in MIT just to clarify I am a research scientist at MIT. I have been there since 2015
I'm there today.
I'm at a prestigious, amazing laboratory called LIDS.
And I hope to be there for a long time.
I work on AI robotics machine learning.
There's a lot of incredible people there.
And by the way, MIT has been very kind to defend me.
Unlike Wikipedia says, it is not an unpaid position.
There was no controversy. It was all very
calm and happy and almost boring
Research that I've been doing there and the other thing because I am half Ukrainian half Russian
And I've traveled to Ukraine and I will travel to Ukraine again
And I will travel to Russia for some very difficult conversations.
My heart has been broken by this war.
I have family in both places.
It has been a really difficult time.
But the little battle about the biography there also starts becoming important for the
first time.
For me, I also want to clarify, sort of personally, I use the opportunity of some inaccuracies
there.
My father was not born in Chicago, Russia.
He was born in Kiev, Ukraine.
I was born in Chicago, which is a town not in Russia.
There is a town called that in Russia, but there's another town into Jikistan, which is
a former Republic of the Soviet Union. It is that town is not called
BU STON, which is funny because we're now in Austin and I also am in Boston. It seems like my
whole life is surrounded by these kinds of towns. So I was born into jikistan and the rest of the
biographies is interesting, but my family is very evenly distributed between their origins and where they go up between Ukraine and Russia, which is as a whole beautiful complexity to this whole thing.
So I want to just correct that. It's like the fascinating about Wikipedia is in some sense those I felt when I saw Wikipedia page about me or anybody I know is there's this beautiful kind of
Saving that this person existed
Like a community that notices you it says huh?
Like a like a little you see like a butterfly that floats and you're like huh?
That it's not just any butterflies that one. I like that one. Are you see a puppy or something or, uh, or it's this big pen?
This one, I remember this one as this scratch and you get notice in that way.
And that, I don't know, it's a beautiful thing in it.
I mean, maybe it's very silly of me and naive, but I feel like Wikipedia in terms
of individuals is an opportunity to celebrate
people, to celebrate ideas.
And not a battleground of attacks of the kind of stuff we might see on Twitter,
like the mockery, the derision, this kind of stuff.
And of course, you don't want to cherry pick.
All of us have flaws and so on, but it just feels like to highlight a controversy
of some sort.
When that doesn't at all represent the entirety of the human most cases, it's sad.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So there's a few things to unpack and all that.
So first one of the things I find really, always find very interesting is, you know, your
status with MIT.
OK, that's upsetting, and it's an argument,
and can be sorted out.
But then what's interesting is you gave as much time to that,
which is actually important and relevant to your career,
and so on, to also where your father was born, which most people
would hardly notice, but is really meaningful to you.
And I find that a lot when I talk to people who have a biography in Wikipedia is,
they're often annoyed by a tiny error that no one's going to notice.
Like, this town into Jekestown has got a new name and so on.
Like, nobody even knows what that means or whatever, but it can be super important.
And so that's one of the reasons, you know, for biographies, we say like
human dignity really matters. And so, you know, some of the things have to do with, and this
is this is a common debate that goes on in Wikipedia is what we call undue weight. So I give
I'll give an example. There was an article I stumbled across many years ago about the mayor.
I know he was on a mayor.
He was a city council member of, I think it was pure Illinois, but some small town in
the Midwest.
And the entry, you know, he's been on the city council for 30 years or whatever.
He's a pretty, I mean, frankly, pretty boring guy. And it seems like a good local city politician.
But in this very short biography,
there was a whole paragraph, a long paragraph
about his son being arrested for DUI.
And it was clearly undue weight.
It's like, what does this got to do with this guy?
If it even deserves a mention,
it wasn't even clear, had he done anything hypocritical,
had he done himself anything wrong, even was his son,
his son got a DUI, that's never great, but it happens to people and it doesn't seem like
a massive scandal for your dad.
So of course, I just took that out immediately.
This is a long, long time ago.
And that's the sort of thing where, you know, we have to really think about in a biography
and about controversies to say, is this a real controversy?
So in general, like one of the things we tend to say is like any section, so if there's a biography
and there's a section called controversies, that's actually poor practice because it just invites
people to say, oh, I want to work on this entry. I don't know, see, there's seven sections. Oh,
this one's quite short.
Can I add something?
Right.
Go out and find some more controversy.
It's not that nonsense, right?
And in general, putting it separate from everything else kind of makes it seem worse and
also doesn't put it in the right context.
Whereas if it's sort of a live flow and there is a controversy, there's always potential
controversy for anyone.
It should just be sort of worked into the overall article because it doesn't
become a temptation, you can contextualize appropriately and so forth.
So that's part of the whole process.
But I think for me, one of the most important things is what I call community health.
So yeah, are we going to get it wrong sometimes? Yeah, of course.
We're humans and doing good quality,
you know, sort of reference material is hard.
The real question is,
how do people react, you know, to a criticism
or a complaint or a concern?
And if the reaction is defensiveness
or combativeness back,
or if someone's really sort of in there being aggressive
and in the wrong, like, no, no, no, hold on, we've got to do this the right way.
You've got to say, okay, hold on, you know, are there good sources?
Is this contextualized appropriately?
Is it even important enough to mention?
What does it mean?
You know, and sometimes one of the areas where I do think there is a very
complicated flaw and you've alluded to it a little bit, but it's like we know the media
is deeply flawed. We know that journalism can go wrong and I would say particularly in
the last whatever 15 years, we've seen a real decimation of local media and local newspapers. We've seen a real
rise in clickbait headlines and sort of eager focus on anything that might be controversial.
We've always had that with us, of course. There's always been tabloid newspapers. But that
makes it a little bit more challenging to say, okay, how do we sort things out when we have a pretty good sense that that not every source is valid. So as an example, a few years ago, it's been quite a while now, we deprecated the mail online as a source.
and the mail online, you know, the digital arm of the Daily Mail, it's a tabloid. It's not
completely, you know, it's not fake news, but it does tend to run very hyped up stories. They really love to attack people and go on the attack for political reasons and so on. And it just
isn't great. And so by saying deprecated, and I think some people say, oh, you banned the Daily
Mail, no, we didn't ban it as source. We just said, look, it's probably not a great source, right? You should probably look
for a better source. So certainly, you know, if the Daily Mail runs a headline saying,
NewCure for Cancer, it's like, you know, probably there's more serious sources than a tabloid
newspaper. So, you know, in an article about lung cancer, you probably wouldn't cite the daily mail. Like, that's kind of ridiculous. But also for celebrities and
so forth to sort of know, well, they do cover celebrity gossip a lot, but they
also tend to have vendettas and so forth, and you really have to step back and go,
hmm, is this really encyclopedic or is this just the daily mail going on a
rant? And some of that requires a great community health. Like I mean, it requires massive community health.
Even for me, for stuff I've seen, that's kind of, I
have actually, if you about people I know, things I know about
myself, I still feel like a love for knowledge emanating
from the article.
Like, in like, I feel the community health.
So I will take all slight inaccuracies.
I would, I love it because that means there's people, for the most part, I feel,
I respect them and love in a search for knowledge. Like sometimes, because I also love
stock overflow, stock exchange for programming related things. And they can get a little cranky sometimes to agree where it's like,
it's not as like you can see,
you can feel the dynamics of the health of the particular community
and sub-communities too, like a particularly C sharp or Java or Python or whatever.
Like there's little like communities that emerge,
you can feel the levels of toxicity
because a little bit of strictness is good, but a little too much is bad because of the
defensiveness because when somebody writes an answer and then somebody else kind of says,
well, modify it and get defensive. And there's this tension that's not conducive to like
improving towards a more truthful depiction of like what would that topic?
Yeah, a great example that I really loved this morning that I saw someone left a note on my user
talk page in English Wikipedia saying it was quite dramatic headline thing racist hook on front page.
So we have on the front page of Wikipedia we have a little section called Did You Know?
And it's just little tidbits and facts, there's things people find interesting.
And there's a whole process for how things get there.
And the one that somebody was raising a question about was, it was comparing a very
well-known US football player, Black.
There was a quote from another famous sport person, comparing him to a Lamborghini, clearly a compliment.
And so somebody said, actually, here's a study, here's some interesting information about how
black sports people are far more often compared to inanimate objects and given that kind of
analogy. And I think it's demeaning to compare a person to a car, et cetera, et cetera. But they said, I'm not, I'm not pulling, I'm not deleting it.
I'm not removing it.
I just want to raise the question.
And then there's this really interesting conversation that goes on where I think the
general consensus was, you know what?
This isn't like, like the alarming headline racist thing on the front page of Wikipedia.
That sounds holy moly.
That sounds bad.
But it's sort of like, oh, actually, yeah,
this probably isn't the sort of analogy
that we think is great.
And so we should probably think about how to improve our language
and not compare sports people to inanimate objects
and particularly be aware of certain racial sensitivities
that there might be around that sort of thing.
If there is a disparity in the media of how people are called,
and I just thought, you know what,
nothing for me to weigh in on here. This is a good conversation. Like, nobody's
saying, you know, people should be banned if they refer to, what was his name? The fridge,
refrigerator, parry. You know, very famous comparison to an inanimate object of a Chicago
bear splinter many years ago. But they're just saying, hey, let's be careful about
analogies that we just pick up from the media.
I said, yeah, me and I'm less good.
On the sort of deprecation of new sources, really interesting, because I think what you're
saying is ultimately, you want to make an article by article decision, kind of use your
own judgment.
And it's such a subtle thing because there's just a lot of hit pieces written about individuals
like myself, for example, that masquerade as kind of an objective thorough exploration
of a human being.
It's fascinating to watch because controversy in hit pieces just get more clicks.
Oh yeah, and this is a, I guess as a Wikipedia contributor,
you start to deeply become aware of that
and start to have a sense, like a radar of clickbait
versus truth, like to pick out the truth
from the clickbait-y type of language.
Oh yeah, I mean, it's really important
and we talk a lot about
weasel words, you know, and you know, actually, I'm sure we'll end up talking about AI and chatGPT, but just to quickly mention in this area, I think one of the potentially powerful tools,
because it is quite good at this. I've played around with and practiced it quite a lot.
But Chaggitv4 is really quite able to take a passage
and point out potentially biased terms
to rewrite it to be more neutral.
Now, it is a bit anodine and it's a bit cliched.
So sometimes it just takes the spirit out of something that's actually not bad.
It's just like, you know, poetic language and you're like, well, okay, that's not actually
helping.
But in many cases, I think that sort of thing is quite interesting.
And I'm also interested in, you know, can you imagine where you feed in a Wikipedia entry and all the sources and you say,
help me find anything in the article that is not accurately reflecting what's in the sources.
And that doesn't have to be perfect. It only has to be good enough to be useful to community.
So if it scans an article and all the sources and you say, oh, it came
back with 10 suggestions and seven of them were decent and three of them it just
didn't understand. Actually, that's probably worth my time to do. And it can help us,
you know, really more quickly get good people to sort of review obscure entries
and things like that. So just as a aside on that, and we'll probably talk about language models a
little bit or a lot more. But one of the articles, one of the hit pieces about me,
the journalist actually was very straightforward and honest about having used GPD to write part
of the article. And then finding that he made an error and apologized for the error, the GPT4 generated,
which has this kind of interesting loop, which the articles are used to write Wikipedia pages.
GPT is trained on what, and there's like this interesting loop where the weasel words and the nuances can get lost or can propagate even
though they're not grounded in reality. Somehow in the generation of the
language model, new truths can be created and kind of linger. Yeah, there's a
famous web comic that's titled Cytogenesis, which is about how
something an errors in Wikipedia and there's no source for it, but then a lazy journalist reads it and writes the source. And then some helpful Wikipedia in spots that it has no source,
finds the source and has it to Wikipedia. And voila, magic, this happened to me once. It nearly happened.
There was this, I mean, it was
really brief. I went back and researched it. I'm like, this is really odd. So biography magazine,
which is a magazine published by the biography TV channel, had a process to profile of me. And it
said, in his spare time, I'm not quoting exactly, I've been in many years, but in his spare time,
he enjoys playing chess with friends. I thought, wow, that sounds great. I would like to be that guy, but actually,
I mean, I play chess with my kids sometimes, but no, it's not a hobby of mine. And I was like,
where did they get that? And I contacted the magazine. I said, where did that come from? They said,
oh, it was in Wikipedia. I looked in the history. There had been vandalism of Wikipedia, which was not damaging.
It's just false.
So any door already been removed.
But then I thought, oh gosh, well, I better mention this
to people because otherwise, it's somebody's
going to read that and they're going to add it.
The entry is going to take on a life of its own.
And then sometimes I wonder if it has
because I was invited a few years ago
to do the ceremonial first move in the world chess championship. And I thought, I wonder if it has because I've been, I was invited a few years ago to do the ceremonial first move in the world chess championship and I thought, I wonder if they think I'm
a really big chess enthusiast because they read this biography magazine articles.
But that, that problem when we think about large language models and the ability to quickly
generate very plausible but not true content, I think it's something that there's going
to be a lot of
shakeout and a lot of implications of that.
What would be hilarious is because of the social pressure of Wikipedia and the momentum you
would actually start playing a lot more chess. Not only the articles are written based on Wikipedia,
but your own life should be changed because of the Wikipedia. Just to make it more convenient.
Yeah.
Aspire too.
Aspire too.
Yeah, aspirations.
What if we just talk about that
before we jump back to some other interesting topics
in Wikipedia, let's talk about GPT-4
and a large language models.
So they are in part trained on Wikipedia content.
Yeah. What are the pros and cons of
these language models? What are your thoughts? Yeah. So I mean, there's a lot of stuff going on.
Obviously, the technology has moved very quickly in the last six months and looks poised to do so
for some time to come. So first things first, I mean, part of our philosophy is the open licensing, the free licensing, the idea that you know, this is what we're here for. We are a volunteer community and we write this
in
Cyclopedia, we give it to the world to do what you like with. You can modify it, redistribute it, redistribute modified versions,
commercially, noncommercial, this is the licensing. So in that sense, ofribute it, redistribute modified versions, commercially, non-commercial,
this is the licensing.
So in that sense, of course, it's completely fine.
Now we do worry a bit about attribution because it is a creative commons attribution,
share-like license.
So attribution is important, not just because of our licensing model and things like
that, but it's just proper attribution is just good intellectual practice.
And that's a really hard, complicated question.
You know, if I were to write something about my visit here, I might say in a blog post,
you know, I was in Austin, which is a city in Texas.
I'm not going to put a source for Austin as a city in Texas.
That's just general knowledge.
I learned it somewhere I can't tell you where.
So you don't have to cite and reference every single thing.
But you know, if I actually did research
and I used something very heavily,
it's just more or more like proper to give your sources.
So we would like to see that.
And obviously, you know, they call it grounding. So
particularly people at Google are really keen on figuring out grounding, statistical terms.
So ground, any text that's generated trying to ground it to the Wikipedia quality source.
I mean, like the same kind of standard of what a source means that Wikipedia uses the same kind of source generator. Yeah, the same kind of thing. And of course,
one of the biggest flaws in chat GPD right now is that it just literally will make things
up just to be amiable. I think it's programmed to be very hopeful and amiable. It doesn't
really know or care about the truth. You can get bullied into it.
Yeah.
It can kind of be convinced.
Well, but like this morning, the story I was telling earlier about comparing a football
player to a Lamborghini, and I thought, is that really racial?
I don't know.
But I'm just mulling it over.
And I thought, I'm going to go to Chat Gbt.
So I said to Chat Gbt4, I said, you know, this, this happened in
Wikipedia. Can you think of examples where a white athlete has been compared to a fast
car in an amendment object? And it comes back to the very plausible essay where it tells,
you know, why these analogies are common in sport level. I said, no, no, I really,
could you give me some specific examples? So it gives me three specific examples, very plausible, correct names of athletes
and contemporaries and all of that. I could have been true. Google every single quote and
none of them existed. And so I'm like, well, that's really not good. Like I wanted to explore
a thought process. I was in. I thought, first I thought, how do I Google and say, well,
it's kind of a hard thing to Google because unless somebody's written about this specific topic, it's, you know, by thought,
it's a language model. It can, it's processed all this data. It can probably piece that together.
But it just can't yet. So I think, uh, I hope that chat GPT 5, 6, 7, you know, three to five years, I'm hoping we'll see a much higher level of accuracy, where
when you ask a question like that, I think instead of being quite so eager to please by
giving you a plausible sounding answer, it's just like, don't know.
Or maybe display the how much bullshit might be in this generated I I'm really would like to make you happy right now
But I'm really stretched then with this generous. Well, it's one of the things I I've said for a long time
So in Wikipedia one of the great things we do
May not be great for our reputation except in a deeper sense for the long term
I think it is but you know, well, we'll be a notice that says
The neutrality of this section has been disputed or the following section doesn't cite in these sources
and I always joke
You know sometimes I wish the New York Times would run a a banner saying the neutrality of this has been disputed
I can give us a sec we had a big fight in the newsroom as to whether to run this or not
But we thought it's important enough to bring it to but just be aware that not all the journalists are on board with, oh, that's actually interesting.
And that's fine.
I would trust them more for that level of transparency.
So yeah, similarly, Chad Gitties should say,
yeah, 87% bullshit.
Well, the neutrality one is really interesting
because that's basically a summary
of the discussions that are going on underneath.
They would be amazing if, like, I should be honest,
I don't look at the talk page often.
I don't, it would be nice somehow if there was a kind of a summary in this banner way of like
this, lots of wars have been fought on this here land. For this here paragraph.
It's really interesting. Yeah, I hadn't thought of that because we wanted things I do spend a
lot of time thinking about these days and you know people have found it
We're moving slowly, but you know, we are moving
Thinking about okay, these tools exist are there ways that this stuff can be useful to our community
Because a part of it is we we do approach things in a
Non-commercial way in a really deep sense. It's been great that Wikipedia has become
very popular, but really we're just a community whose hobby is writing in
Encyclopedia. That's first, and if it's popular great, if it's not, okay, we might
have trouble paying for more servers, but it'll be fine. And so how do we help the
community use these tools? What are the ways that these tools can support people?
In one example, I never thought about, I'm gonna start playing with it is,
feed in the article and feed in the talk page,
and say, can you suggest some warnings
in the article based on the conversations in the talk page?
I think it might be good at that.
It might get it wrong sometimes,
but again, if it's reasonably successful at doing that,
and you can say, oh, actually, yeah, it does suggest,
the neutrality of this has been disputed on a section that has a seven page discussion in the
back. That might be useful. I know. Yeah, I mean, some more
color to the not neutrality, but also the amount of emotion
laden in the exploration of this particular part of the topic.
It might actually help you look at more controversial pages, like a page on the
Wayne Ukraine or a page on Israel and Palestine. There could be parts that everyone agrees on,
and there's parts that are just tough. It would be nice to, when looking at those beautiful long articles to
know, like, all right, let me just take in some stuff where everybody agrees on.
I give an example that I haven't looked at in a long time, but I was really pleased with
what I saw at the time.
So the discussion was that they're building something in Israel. And for their own political
reasons, one side calls it a wall, harkening back to Berlin wall apartheid, they have
to cause it a security fence. So we can understand quite quickly, if we give it a moment's thought,
like, okay, I understand why people would have this grappling over the language, like,
okay, you want to highlight the negative aspects of this
and you want to highlight the positive aspects.
So you're going to try and choose a different name.
And so there was this really fantastic Wikipedia
discussion on the talk page.
How do we word that paragraph to talk about
the different naming?
It's called this by Israel, it's called this by Palestinians.
And that, how you explain that to people could be quite charged, right?
You could easily explain, oh, there's this difference, and it's because this side's good
and this side's bad, and that's why there's a difference.
Or you could say, actually, let's just, let's try and really stay as neutral as we can
and try to explain the reason.
So you may come away from it with a concept. Oh, okay, I understand what this debate is about now.
And just the term, Israel Palestine conflict is still the title of a page,
it will compete it, but the word conflict is something that is a charged word. Of course.
Yeah.
Because from the Palestinian side or from certain sides,
the word conflict doesn't accurately describe the situation because if you see it as a genocide,
one way genocide, it's not a conflict because to that, to, to people that discuss,
that challenge the word conflict, they see, you know, conflict is when there's two equally powerful sides to fighting.
Yeah, yeah.
No, it's hard.
And, you know, in a number of cases, so this is actually speaks to a slightly broader phenomenon,
which is there are number cases where there is no one word that can get consensus.
And in the body of an article, that's usually okay because we can explain the whole thing.
You can come away with an understanding of why each side wants to use a certain word.
But there are some aspects like the PayTest have a title.
So there's that.
Same thing with certain things like photos.
It's like, well, there's different photos which one's best.
A lot of different views on that, but at the end of the day, you need the lead photo because there's
one slot for a lead photo. Categories is another one. So at one point, I have no idea if it's in
there today, but I don't think so. I was listed in, you know, kind of American entrepreneurs
find American atheists.
And I said, hmm, that doesn't feel right to me.
Like just personally, it's true.
I mean, I wouldn't disagree with the objective fact of it.
But when you click the category and you see sort of a lot
of people who are, you might say, American atheist activist, because that's their
big issue. So, Mal and Murio Hare or various famous people who Richard Dawkins, who make it a big
part of their public argument in persona, but that's not true of me. It's just like my private
personal belief. It doesn't really, it's not something I campaign about. So, it felt weird to
put me in the category, but what category would you put?
And do you need that guy?
In this case, I argued, that doesn't need that guy.
Like, that's not, I don't speak about it publicly, except incidentally from time to time.
I don't campaign about it.
So it's weird to put me with this group of people.
And that argument carried that, I hope not just because it was me, but categories can
be like that.
Where you're either in the category or you're not.
And sometimes it's a lot more complicated than that.
And is it, again, we go back to, is it undue weight?
You know, if, uh, someone who is now prominent in public life and generally considered to be a good person, uh,
was convicted of something, let's say, DUI, when they were young. Normally,
in normal sort of discourse, we don't think, oh, this person should be in the category
of American criminals. Because you think, oh, criminal, technically speaking, it's against
the law to drive under the influence of alcohol, and you were arrested, and you spent a month in prison or whatever, but it's odd to say that's a criminal. So just as an example in this area is
Mark Wilberg, Marky Mark, that's what I always think of him as, because that was his first sort of famous name who
I wouldn't think should be listed as in the category American criminal, even though he did he was convicted of
as in the category American criminal, even though he did, he was convicted of quite a bad crime when he was a young person,
but we don't think of him as a criminal.
Should the entry talk about that?
Yeah, it's actually that's actually an important part
of his life story, you know, that he had a very rough use
and he could have gone on a really dark path
and he turned his life around, that's actually interesting.
So categories are tricky, especially with people, because we like to
sign labels to people into ideas somehow and those labels stick. And there's certain
words that have a lot of power like criminal, like political left, right, center, anarchist, objectivist, what other philosophies are there? Marxist, communist, social-democratic,
socialist, socialist. And like if you add that as a category, all of a sudden it's like,
oh boy, you're that guy now. Yeah, and I don't know if you want to be that guy.
Well, there's some, definitely some really charged ones. Like, oh, right. I think it's quite complicated and tough.
I mean, it's not completely meaningless label.
But boy, I think you really have to pause
before you actually put that label on someone.
Partly because now you're putting them
in a group of people, some of them are quite,
and you wouldn't want to be grouped with.
So it's, yeah.
Let's go into some, you mentioned the hot water of the pool that were both tipping a toe in.
Do you think Wikipedia has a left leaning political bias, which is something it is sometimes accused of?
Yeah, so I don't think so, not broadly.
And, you know, I think you can always point to specific entries and talk about specific biases, but that's part
of the process of Wikipedia.
Anyone can come and challenge and to go on about that.
But I see fairly often on Twitter some quite extreme accusations of bias.
And I think, you know, actually, I just, I don't see it.
I don't buy that.
And if you ask people for an example, they normally struggle.
And depending on who they are and what it's about.
So it's certainly true that some people who have quite fringe viewpoints.
And who knows the full rush of history in 500 years,
they might be considered to be path-breaking geniuses,
but at the moment, quite fringe views.
And they're just unhappy that Wikipedia doesn't report
on their fringe views as being mainstream.
And that, by the way, goes across all kinds of fields.
I mean, I was once accosted on the street,
outside the Ted conference in Vancouver by a guy who's a homeopath,
it was very upset that Wikipedia's entry on homeopathy basically says it's pseudo-science.
And he felt that was biased and I said, oh, I can't really help you because, you know,
it sites, we cite good quality sources to talk about the scientific status and it's not very good.
good quality sources to talk about the scientific status and it's not very good. So, you know, it depends and, you know, I think it's something that we should always be vigilant about. But it's, you know,
in general, I think we're pretty good. And I think any time you go to any serious
political controversy, we should have a pretty balanced perspective on who
saying what what the views are and so forth. I would actually argue that the
the areas where we are more likely to have bias that persists for a long period
of time are actually fairly obscure things or maybe fairly non-political
things. I just give it's kind of a humorous example, but it's meaningful.
If you read our entries about Japanese anime,
they tend to be very, very positive and very favorable
because almost no one knows about Japanese anime
except for fans.
And so the people who come and spend their days
writing Japanese anime articles, they love it.
They kind of have an inherent love for the whole area.
Now, they're, of course, being human beings, they have their internal debates and disputes
about what's better or not, you know.
But in general, they're quite positive because nobody actually cares.
On anything that people are quite passionate about, then hopefully, you know, there's like
quite a lot of interesting stuff.
So, I'll give an example, a contemporary example,
where I think we've done a good job as of my most recent
sort of look at it.
And that is the question about the efficacy of masks
during the COVID pandemic.
And that's an area where I would say
the public authorities really kind of jerked us all
around a bit.
And the very first days
I said, whatever you do, don't rush on and buy masks.
And their concern was shortages in hospitals, okay, fair enough.
Later, it's like, no, everybody's got to wear a mask everywhere.
It really works really well.
And it's, you know, then now I think it's the evidence is mixed, right?
Mass seemed to help. In my personal view, mass seemed to help.
They're no huge burden, you know, you might as well wear a mask in any
environment where you're with a giant crowd of people and so forth.
Um, but it's very politicized that one.
It's very politicized where, uh, certainly in the US, you know, much more so,
I mean, I live in, in the UK, I live in London. I've never seen kind of on the streets, you know, much more so. I mean, I live in the UK, I live in London.
I've never seen kind of on the streets sort of the kind of thing that I,
there's a lot of reports of people actively angry because someone else is wearing a mask.
That sort of thing in public.
And so because it became very politicized, then clearly if Wikipedia,
if you go to
Wikipedia and you research this topic, I think you'll find more or less what I've just
said.
Like, actually, after it's all, you know, to this point in history, it's mixed evidence.
Like, math seemed to help, but maybe not as much as some of the authority said, and here
we are.
And that's kind of an example where I think, okay, we've done a good job, but I suspect
there are people on both sides of that very emotional debate who think this is ridiculous.
Hopefully, we've got quality sources.
So then hopefully, those people who read this can say, oh, actually, it is complicated.
If you can get to the point of saying, okay, I have my view by understanding other views
and I do think it's a complicated question. Great.
Now we're a little bit more mature as a society.
Well, that one is an interesting one because I feel like I hope that that article also contains
the meta conversation about the politicization of that topic. To me, it's almost more interesting
than whether masks work or not. At least at this point, it's like why it became masks became a symbol of the oppression of a centralized government if you were them
You're a sheep that follows the mask control the mass hysteria of an authoritarian regime
And if you don't wear a mask then you are a
science-denier anti-vaxxer a
alt-right, probably a Nazi. Exactly. That whole politicization of society is just so damaging. I don't know in the broader
world, how do we start to fix that? That's like really hard question. Well, at every moment, because you mentioned mainstream and fringe, there seems to be a tension
here, and I wonder what your philosophy is on it, because there's mainstream ideas and there's
fringe ideas. You look at lab leak theory for this virus that could be other things we can discuss, where there's a mainstream narrative,
or if you just look at the percent of the population or the population with platforms,
what they say, and then what is a small percentage in opposition to that, and what is Wikipedia's responsibility to accurately represent both the mainstream and the French do you think?
Well, I mean, I think we have to try to do our best to recognize both, but also to appropriately contextualize.
And so, this can be quite hard, particularly when emotions are high. That's just a fact about human beings.
I'll give a simpler example, because there's not a lot of emotion around it.
Our entry on the moon doesn't say some say the moon's made of rocks, some say cheese.
You know, who knows? That kind of false neutrality is not what we want to get to. Like that
doesn't make any sense. But that one's easy. Like we all understand, I think there is a
Wikipedia entry called something like the moon is made of cheese
where it talks about this is a common sort of joke or thing that children say or that people tell to children or whatever, you know, it's just a thing.
It's like everybody's heard moons made of cheese.
But nobody thinks, wow, Wikipedia is so one side, it doesn't even acknowledge the cheese theory.
I say the same thing about flat earth, you know, again.
It's very like what I'm looking up right now.
Very little controversy.
We will have an entry about flat earth,
theorizing, flat earth people.
My personal view is most of the people who claim to be flat earthers are just having a laugh
trolling and more power to them have some fun, but
let's not be you know ridiculous. But of course for most of human history people believe that
there is this flat. So the article I'm looking at is actually kind of focusing on this history.
Flat Earth is an archaic and scientifically disproven conception of the Earth's shape as a plane or disc. Many ancient cultures were described to
Flat Earth as cosmography with pretty cool pictures of what a Flat Earth would
look like. What dragon is that dragon? No angels on the edge. There's a lot of
controversy about that. What is in the edge? Is it the wall? Is it angels?
Dragons? Is there a dome? And how can you fly from South Africa to Perth?
Because on a flat earth view, that's really too far
for any plane to make it.
It's all spread out.
What I want to know is what's on the other side, Jimmy?
What's on the other side?
That's what all of us want to know.
Yeah.
So there's some, I presume there's probably a small section about the conspiracy theory
of Flat Earth, because I think there's a size of 1% of the population who at least will say they
believe in a Flat Earth. Yeah, I think it is a movement that just says that the mainstream narrative
to have distrust and skepticism about the mainstream narrative, which to a very
small degree is probably a very productive thing to do as part of the scientific process,
but you can get a little silly and ridiculous with it.
Yeah. Yeah, it's exactly right. And so, you know, I think I find on many, many cases, and of course,
I like anybody else might quibble about this of that in any Wikipedia article. But in general, I think there is a pretty good
sort of willingness and indeed eagerness to say, oh, let's, let's fairly represent all of the
meaningfully important sides. So there's still a lot to unpack in that, right? So, meaningfully important. So, you know, people who are raising questions about
the efficacy of masks, okay, that's actually a reasonable thing to have a discussion about, and
hopefully we should treat that as a, as a fair conversation to have, and actually address which
authorities have said, what, and so on and so forth.
And then there are other cases where it's not meaningful opposition. You know, like you just wouldn't say. I doubt if the main article, Moon, it may mention, geez, probably not even because
it's not credible and it's not even meant to be serious by anyone,
or the article on the earth certainly won't have a paragraph that says,
well, most scientists think it's round, but certain people think flat.
Like, that's just a silly thing to put in that article.
You would want to sort of address, you know, that's an interesting cultural phenomenon.
You want to put it somewhere.
So this, you know, this goes into all kinds of things about politics.
You want to be really careful, really thoughtful
about not getting caught up in the anger of our times
and really recognize.
Yes, I always thought, I remember being really kind of proud of the US at the time
when it was McCain was running against Obama because I thought, I've got plenty of disagreements
with both of them, but they both seem like thoughtful and interesting people who I would have
different disagreements with, but I always felt like, yeah, like that's good. Now we can have
a debate. Now we can have an interesting debate and it doesn't just sort of people slam each other personal attacks and so forth. And you're saying Wikipedia also
represented that. I hope so. Yeah, and I think so in the main. Obviously you can always find
debate that went horribly wrong because there's humans involved. But speaking of those humans,
I would venture to guess, I don't know the data, maybe you can let me know. But the personal political leaning of the group of people who had a Wikipedia
probably leans left, I would guess. So to me, the question there is, I mean, the same is
true for Silicon Valley, the task for Silicon Valley is to create platforms that are not politically biased, even though
there is a bias for the engineers who create it.
And I think I believe it's possible to do that.
There's kind of a conspiracy theory that it somehow is impossible, and there's this whole
conspiracy where the left is controlling it, and so on.
I think engineers, for the most part part went to create platforms that are open
and unbiased that are that create all kinds of perspective.
Because that's super exciting to have all kinds of perspectives battle it out.
But yeah, still is there is there a degree to which the personal political bias
of the editors might see been in silly ways and in big
ways.
Silly ways could be, I think, hopefully I'm correct in saying this, but the right will call
it the Democrat party and the left will call it the Democratic party.
Right.
Yeah.
Like subtle.
It always hits my ear weird.
Like, are we children here?
They were like, we're literally taking words
and like just jabbing at each other.
Like, yeah, I can like capitalize a thing in a certain way
or I can like just take a word and mess with them.
And that's a small way of how you use words.
But you can also have a big way about beliefs,
about various perspectives on political events, and 100 Biden's laptop,
on how big of a story that is or not, how big the censorship of that story is or not,
and then there's these camps that take very strong points, and they construct big narratives
around that, and I mean, it's very sizable, percent of the population believes the two
narratives that compete with each other. Yeah, I mean, it's really interesting. And it feels, but it's hard to judge, you know,
the sweep of history within your own lifetime. But it feels like it's gotten much worse,
that this idea of two parallel universes where people can agree on certain basic facts, feels worse than it used
to be.
I'm not sure if that's true or if it just feels that way, but also I'm not sure what the
causes are.
I think I would lay a lot of the blame in recent years on social media algorithms, which reward clickbait headlines, which reward tweets that go viral
and they go viral because they're cute and clever. I mean, my most successful tweet ever
by a fairly wide margin. Some reporter tweeted at Elon Musk because he was complaining about Wikipedia or something.
You should buy Wikipedia and I just wrote Not for Sale. And you know, 90-zillion retweets and people
liked it and it was all very good. But I'm like, you know what, it's cute line, right? And it's a
good like mic drop and all that. And I was pleased with myself. It's not really discourse, right? It's cute line, right? And it's a good like mic drop and all that. And I was pleased with myself
Like it's not really discourse, right? It's not really sort of the what I like to do
But it's what social media really rewards which is kind of
Let's you and him have a fight, right? And that's more so I mean, it's funny because at the time I was I was texting with Elon who it's very pleasant to me
All of that
It's like he might have been a little bit shitty.
The reporter might have been a little bit shitty,
but you fed into the shitty
with a snarky funny response, not for sale.
And like, where do you, like what?
So that's a funny little exchange
and you could probably after that laugh it off.
And it's fun.
Well, like that kind of mechanism
that rewards the snark can go into viciousness.
Yeah, and we certainly see it online.
A series of tweets, a tweet thread of 15 tweets that assesses the quality of the evidence for
masks, pros and cons, and that's not going to go viral.
masks, pros and cons, and sort of where this, that's not going to go viral, you know. But you know, a Smackdown for a famous politician who is famously in favor of mask who also
went to a dinner and didn't wear a mask, that's going to go viral.
And you know, that's partly human nature.
You know, people love to call out hypocrisy and all of that, but it's partly what these
systems elevate automatically. people love to call out hypocrisy and all of that, but it's partly what these systems
elevate automatically.
I talk about this with respect to Facebook, for example.
So I think Facebook has done a pretty good job, although it's taken longer than it should
in some cases, but if you have a very large following and you're really spouting hatred
or misinformation, disinformation. They've kicked people
off, they've done some reasonable things there. But actually, the deeper issue is of this, the
anger we're talking about, of the contentiousness of everything. I make a family example with two great stereotypes.
So one, the crackpot racist uncle,
and one, the sweet grandma.
And I always wanna point out about all of my uncles
and my family were wonderful people.
So I didn't have a crackpot racist.
But everybody knows the stereotype.
Well, so grandma, she just posts,
like sweet comments on the kids pictures
and congratulates people
on their wedding anniversary.
And crackpot uncles posting his nonsense.
And normally, it's sort of at Christmas dinner,
everybody rolls her eyes, oh yeah, Uncle Frank's here.
He's probably gonna say some racist comment
and we're gonna tell him to shut up
or maybe let's not invite him this year,
the normal human drama.
He's got his three mates down at the pub who listened to him
and all of that. But now, grandma's got 54 followers on Facebook, which is the intimate family,
racist uncle has 714. He's not a massive influencer, whatever. But how did that happen? It's because
the algorithm notices, oh, when she posts, nothing, he posts and then everybody jumps in and
goes, shut up on a whole frank, you know, like that's outrageous. And it's like, oh, there's
engagement, there's page views, there's ads, right? And those algorithms, I think they're
working to improve that. But it's really hard for them. It's hard to improve that if that
actually is working. If the people who are saying things that get engagement,
if it's not too awful, but it's just, you know,
like maybe it's not a racist cycle,
but maybe it's an uncle who posts a lot about
what an idiot Biden is, right?
Which isn't necessarily an offensive
or blockable or banable thing, and it shouldn't be.
But if that's the discourse that gets elevated
because it gets a rise out of people,
then suddenly in a society, it's like, oh, this is, we get more of what we reward.
So I think that's a piece of what's gone on.
Well, if we could just take that tangent.
I'm having a conversation with Mark Zuckerberg.
Second time, is there something you can comment on how to decrease toxicity on that particular
platform Facebook?
You also have worked on creating a social network that is less toxic yourself.
So, can we just talk about the different ideas that these already big social networks can
do and what you have been trying to do?
So, a piece of it is it's hard.
So, the problem with making a recommendation to Facebook is that I actually believe their
business model makes it really hard for them.
And I'm not anti-capitalism.
I'm not, you know, great.
Somebody's got business and they're making money.
That's not where I come from.
But certain business models mean you are going to prioritize things that maybe aren't
that long-term helpful. And so that's a big piece of it. So certainly for Facebook you could
say, you know, with vast resources start to prioritize content that's higher
quality, that's healing, that's kind, try not to prioritize content that seems to
be just getting a rise out of people. Now those are vague human descriptions, right? But I do believe good machine-running algorithms,
you can optimize in slightly different ways. But to do that, you may have to say,
actually we're not necessarily going to increase page views to the maximum extent right now.
And I've said this to people at Facebook, it's like,
you know, if your actions are, you know, convincing people that you're breaking Western civilization, that's a really bad for business in the long run. Certainly, these days I'll say,
Twitter is the thing that's on people's minds as being more upsetting at the moment.
Twitter is the thing that's on people's minds as being more upsetting at the moment, but I think it's true and so
One of the things that's really interesting about Facebook
Compared to a lot of companies is that more has a pretty unprecedented amount of power
His ability to name members of the board his control of the the company is pretty hard to break. Even if financial
results aren't as good as they could be because he's taken a step back from the perfect optimization
to say, actually, for the long-term health in the next 50 years of this organization, we need
to rein in some of the things that are working for us and making money because they're actually
giving us a bad reputation. So one of the recommendations I would say is us and making money because they're actually giving us a bad reputation.
So one of the recommendations I would say is, and this is not to do with the algorithms
and all that, but you know, how about just a moratorium on all political advertising?
I don't think it's their most profitable segment, but it's given rise to a lot of
deep hard questions about dark money, about, you know, ads that are run by questionable people that push false narratives or the classic
kind of thing is you run, I saw a study about Brexit in the UK where people were talking
about, there were ads run to animal rights activists saying, finally, when we're out from under Europe, the UK can
pass proper animal rights legislation. We're not constrained by the European process. Similarly,
for people who are advocates of fox hunting to say, finally, when we're out of Europe, we can
re-implement. So you're telling people what they wanna hear. And in some cases, it's really hard for journalists
to see that.
So it used to be that for political advertising,
you really needed to find some kind of mainstream narrative.
And this is still true to an extent.
Mainstream narrative that 60% of people can say,
oh, I can buy into that, which meant it pushed you to the center,
it pushed you to sort of try and find some nuance balance.
But if your main method of recruiting people is a tiny little one-on-one conversation with
them because you're able to target using targeted advertising, suddenly you don't need consistent,
you just need a really good targeting operation, really good Cambridge analytic style machine
learning algorithm data to convince people.
And that just feels really problematic.
So I mean, until they can think about how to solve that problem, I would just say, you
know what, it's going to cost a sex amount, but it's going to be worth it to kind of say,
you know what, we actually think our political advertising policy hasn't really helped
contribute to that discourse and dialogue and finding
reasoned, you know, middle ground and compromise solution. So let's just not do that for a while
until we figure that out. So that's maybe a piece of advice. And coupled with, as you were saying,
recommend our systems for the newsfeed and other contexts that don't always
optimize engagement but optimize the long-term mental well-being and
balance and growth of a human being. Yeah, that's a very difficult problem.
It's a difficult problem. Yeah. And you know, so in with WT social, WEEKi
Green social, we're launching in a few months time, a completely new system,
new domain name, new lots of things. But the idea is to say, let's focus on trust. People can
rate each other as trustworthy, rate content as trustworthy. You have to start from somewhere,
so it'll start with a core base of our tiny community who I think are sensible thoughtful people
want to recruit more.
But to say, you know what, actually let's have that as a pretty strong element to say,
let's not optimize based on what gets the most page views in this session.
Let's optimize on what sort of the feedback from people is.
This is meaningfully enhancing my life.
And so part of that is, and it's probably not a good business model, but part of that is
say, okay, we're not going to pursue an advertising business model, but a membership model
where you can have to be a member, but you can pay to be a member.
You maybe get some benefit from that, but in general, say actually the problem with, and actually the division
I would say is, and the analogy I would give is broadcast television funded by advertising
gives you a different result than paying for HBO, paying for Netflix, paying for whatever. And the reason is, if you think about it,
what is your incentive as a TV producer,
you're gonna make a comedy for ABC network in the US,
you basically say, I want something that almost everybody
will like and listen to.
So it tends to be a little blander, family friendly,
whatever. Whereas if you say, family friendly, whatever.
Whereas if you say, oh, actually, I'm going to use the HBO example and an old example.
You say, you know what? Sopranos isn't for everybody. Sex in the city isn't for everybody.
But between the two shows, we've got something for everybody that they're willing to pay
for. So you can get edgier, higher quality in my view content rather than saying it's got to not offend anybody in the world
It's got to be for everybody, which is really hard
So same thing, you know here in a social network if your business model is advertising it's gonna drive you in one direction
If your business model is membership, I think it drives you in a different direction
I actually and I've said this to Elon
About Twitter blue which I think wasn't rolled out well and so forth,
but it's like, hmm, the piece of that that I like
is to say, look, actually, if there's a model
where your revenue is coming from people
who are willing to pay for the service,
even if it's only part of your revenue,
if it's a substantial part,
that does change your broader incentives to say,
actually, your people going to be willing
to pay for something that's actually just toxicity in their lives.
Now, I'm not sure it's been rolled out well, I'm not sure how it's going and maybe I'm
wrong about that as a plausible business model.
But I do think it's interesting to think about just in broad terms, business model drives outcomes in sometimes surprising ways unless
you really pause to think about it.
So if we can just link on Twitter and Elon before I would love to talk to you about the underlying
business model Wikipedia, which is this brilliant bold move at the very beginning, but since
you mentioned Twitter, what do you think works?
What do you think is broken about Twitter? It's a long conversation but to start with one of the things that I always say is it's a
really hard problem. I can see that right up front. I said this about the old ownership of Twitter
and the new ownership of Twitter because unlike Wikipedia, and this is true actually for all social media, there's
a box and the box basically says, what do you think? What's on your mind? You can write
whatever the hell you want, right? That's just true by the way, even for YouTube, I mean,
the box is to upload a video, but again, it's just like an open-ended invitation to express
yourself. And what makes that hard is some people have a really toxic, really bad, you know,
some people are very aggressive, they're actually stalk really toxic, really bad, you know, some people are very aggressive.
They're actually stalking. They're actually, you know, abusive.
And suddenly you deal with a lot of problems.
Whereas at Wikipedia, there is no box that says, what's on your mind?
There's a box that says, this is an entry about the moon.
Please be neutral. Please set your facts. Then there's a talk page which is not coming rant
about Donald Trump.
If you go on the talk page of the Donald Trump entry
and you just start ranting about Donald Trump,
people would say, what are you doing?
Like stop doing that.
Like we're not here to discuss,
like there's a whole world of the internet out there
for you to go and rant about Donald Trump.
It's just not fun to do on Wikipedia
as somehow as fun on Twitter.
Well, also on Wikipedia people are are going to say, stop.
Yeah.
And actually, are you here to tell us like, how can we improve the article?
Or are you just here to rant about Trump?
Because that's not actually interesting.
So because the goal is different.
So that's just admitting and saying up front, this is a hard problem.
Certainly, I'm writing a book on trust.
So the idea is, you know, in the last 20 years, we've lost trust in all kinds of institutions and
politics.
The Edelman Trust Barometer survey has been done for a long time.
Trust in politicians, trust in journalism, it's declined substantially.
And I think, in many cases,
deservedly. So how do we restore trust? And how do we think about that? And does that also include
trust in the idea of truth? Trust in the idea of truth, even the concept of facts and truth is
really, really important, and the idea of uncomfortable truths is really important.
Now, so when we look at Twitter, and we say, we can see, okay, this is really hard.
So here's my story about Twitter.
It's a two-part story, and it's all pre-Elon Musk ownership. So many years back, somebody accused me of horrible crimes on Twitter.
And I, like anybody would, I'm in the public eye.
People say bad things.
I don't really, I brush it off, whatever.
I'm like, this is actually really bad.
Like, accusing me of pedophilia.
Like, that's just not okay.
So I thought, I'm going to report this.
So I click report, I report the tweet,
and there's five others, and I go through the process,
and then I get an email that says,
you know, whatever, a couple hours later saying,
thank you for your report, we're looking into this.
Great, okay, good.
Then several hours further, I get an email back saying,
sorry, we don't see anything here to violate
our terms of use.
And I'm like, okay, so I email Jack, and I say, Jack, come on, like this is ridiculous. And he
emails back roughly saying, yeah, sorry, Jimmy, don't worry, we'll sort this out.
And I just thought to myself, you know what, that's not the point, right? I'm Jimmy Wales.
I know Jack Dorsey. I can email Jack Dorsey. he'll listen to me because he's got an email from me,
and sort it out for me.
What about the teenager who's being bullied
and is getting abuse and getting accusations and aren't true?
Are they getting the same kind of like really poor result
in that case?
So fast forward a few years, same thing happens.
The exact quote earlier is,
please help me. I'm only 10 years old and Jimmy Wells raped me last week.
It's like, come on, fuck off. That's ridiculous. I report. I'm like, this time I'm reporting,
but I'm thinking, well, we'll see what happens. This one gets even worse because
then I get a same result email back saying, sorry, we don't see any problems.
So I raise it with other members of the board who I know and Jack and like this is really ridiculous like this is outrageous
and some of the board members friends of mine sympathetic and so good for them
But actually got an email back then from the general counsel head of trust and safety saying
Actually, there's nothing in this tweet that violates
our terms of service, we don't regard,
and gave reference to the MeToo movement.
If we didn't allow accusations,
the MeToo movement, it's an important thing.
And I was like, you know what, actually,
if someone says I'm 10 years old
and someone raped me last week,
I think the advice should be,
here's the phone number of the police.
Like, you need to get the police involved.
It's not the place for that accusation.
Even back then, by the way, they did delete those tweets, but the rationale that gave
a spammy behavior, so completely separate from abusing me, it was just like, oh, they were
retweeting too often.
That's just broken.
That's a system that it's not working for people in the public eye.
I'm sure it's not working for private people who get abuse.
Really horrible abuse can happen.
So, how is that today?
Well, it hasn't happened to me since Elon took over, but I don't see why it couldn't.
And I suspect, now if I send a report and email someone, there's no one there to email
me back, because he's gotten rid of a lot of the trust and safety staff.
So I suspect that problem is still really hard.
Just content moderation at huge scales.
At huge scales is really something.
And I don't know the full answer to this.
I mean, a piece of it could be, you know, to say, actually making specific allegations
of crimes,
this isn't the place to do that.
We've got a huge database.
If you've got an accusation of crime,
here's who you call the police, the FBI, whatever it is.
It's not to be done in public.
And then you do face really complicated questions
about me too, movement and people coming forward
in public and all of that.
But it's, again, it's like, probably you should talk to a journalist, right?
Probably there are better avenues than just tweeting from an account that was created
10 days ago, obviously set up to abuse someone.
So I think they could do a lot better, but I also admit it's a hard problem.
And there's also ways to indirectly or more humorously or more mocking way to make the same kinds of accusations.
In fact, the accusations you mentioned,
if I were to guess, don't go that viral
because they're not funny enough or cutting enough,
but if you make it witty and cutting and meme it somehow,
yeah, sometimes actually indirectly
making the accusations versus directly making the accusations.
I can go viral and I can destroy reputations.
And you get to watch yourself,
just all kinds of narratives take hold.
No, I mean, I remember another case that didn't bother me
because it wasn't of that nature.
But somebody was saying, I'm sure you're making millions
off of Wikipedia. I'm like, no, actually, I'm sure you're making millions off of Wikipedia.
I'm like, no, actually, I don't even work there.
I have no salary. Um, and they're like, you're lying.
I'm going to check your 990 form, which is the US forum for tax reporting for
charities. I'm like, yeah, I'm not here.
Here's the link. Go, go read it and you'll see I'm listed as a board member.
And my salary is listed as zero.
So, you know, so things like that, it's like, okay, that one, that feels like you're wrong,
but I can take that and we can have that debate quite quickly.
And again, it didn't go viral because it was kind of silly and if anything would have
gone viral, it was me responding.
But that's one where it's like, actually, I'm happy to respond because a lot of people
don't know that I don't work there and that I don't make millions and I'm not a billionaire
Well, they must know that because it's in most news media about me, but
The other one I didn't respond to publicly because it's like
Barbara Streisand effect, you know, it's like sometimes calling attention to someone who's abusing you who basically has
No followers and so on is just a waste.
And everything you're describing now is just something that all of us have to kind of
learn because everybody's in the public eye.
I think when you have just two followers and you get bullied by one of the followers,
it's hard to just as much as when you have a large number.
So it's not your situation.
I think it's echoed in the situations of millions of other especially teenagers and kids and so on. Yeah, I mean, it's actually
An example
So we don't generally use my picture in the banners anymore on Wikipedia
but we did and then we did an experiment one year where we tried other people's pictures. So one of our developers and
experiment one year where we tried other people's pictures. So one of our developers and one guy,
a lovely, very sweet guy and he doesn't look like your immediate
thought of a nerdy Silicon Valley developer.
He looks like a heavy metal dude because he's cool.
And so suddenly here he is with long hair and tattoos and
there's his sort of say, here's what your money goes for, here's my letter asking for money. He got massive abuse from Wikipedia, like calling him creepy,
and you know, like really massive. And this was being shown to 80 million people a day. His picture,
not the abuse, right? The abuse was elsewhere on the internet. And he was bothered by it. And I
thought, you know what, there is a difference. I actually am in the public eye.
I get huge benefits from being in the public eye.
I go around and make public speeches.
If he ran up thing, I think I can write
and get it published in the New York Times
and I have this interesting life.
He's not a public figure.
And so actually, he wasn't mad at us.
He was just like, yeah, actually suddenly
being thrust
in the public eye and you get suddenly lots of abuse,
which normally, if you're a teenager and somebody in your
class is abusing you, it's not going to go viral.
So you're only going to, it's going to be hurtful
because it's local and it's your classmates or whatever.
But when ordinary people go viral in some abusive way,
it's really, really quite tragic.
I don't know.
Even at a small scale, it feels viral.
When five people, yeah.
Five people in your school, and there's a rumor,
and there's this feeling like you're surrounded.
And nobody, and the feeling of loneliness, I think,
which you're speaking to, when you don't have a platform to defend yourself.
And then this powerlessness that I think a lot of teenagers definitely feel.
And a lot of people.
I think you're right.
And that I think even when just like two people make up stuff about you or lie about you
or say mean things about you or bully you, that can feel like a crowd.
Yeah, yeah.
That's it.
And it's a crowd. Yeah, yeah, that's it.
And it's a tear.
I mean, whatever that is in our genetics and our biology and our, the way our brain works,
it just can be a terrifying experience.
And somehow to correct that, I mean, I think because everybody feels the pain of that,
everybody suffers the pain of that.
I think we'll be forced to fix that as a society to figure out a way around that.
I think it's really hard to fix because I don't think that problem isn't necessarily new.
Someone in high school who writes graffiti that says,
Becky has a slot and spreads a rumor about what Becky did last weekend.
That's always been damaging.
It's always been hurtful.
And that's really hard.
Those kinds of attacks are all the time itself.
They perceive the internet.
Now, what do you think about this technology
that feels Wikipedia-like, which is community notes
on Twitter?
Do you like it?
Yeah.
Pros and cons, do you think it's scalable?
I do like it.
I don't know enough about specifically how it's implemented to really have a very deep view, but I do think it's quite it's the uses I've seen of it. I've I found quite good and in some cases
changed my mind, you know, it's like I see something. And of course, you know, the sort of human tendency is
It's like I see something. And of course, the sort of human tendency is
to retweet something that you hope is true
or that you are afraid is true.
Or it's like that kind of quick mental action.
And then I saw something that I liked and I agreed with
and then a community note under it that made me think,
oh, actually, this is a more nuanced issue. So I like that. I think that's really important. Now, how is it specifically
implemented? Is it scale all that? I don't really know how they've done it. So I can't
really comment on that. But in general, I do think it's, you know, when you're only
mechanisms on Twitter, and you're a big Twitter user. You know, we know the platform and you've got plenty of followers and all of that.
The only mechanisms are retweeting,
replying, blocking.
It's a pretty limited scope and it's kind of good if there's a way to
elevate a specific, thoughtful response.
And it kind of goes to, again, like, does the
algorithm just pick the retweet or the, I mean, retweeting, it's not even the algorithm
that makes it viral. Like, you know, if, uh, palo-quelo, um, very famous author, I think he's got,
like, I don't know, I haven't looked lately. He used to have eight million Twitter followers.
I think I looked, he's got 16 million now or whatever. Well, if he retweets something, it's going to get,
I'm seeing a lot.
Or Elon Musk, if he retweets something, it's going to get seen a lot.
That's not the algorithm.
That's just the way the platform works.
So it is kind of nice if you have something else
and how that something else is designed.
That's obviously complicated question.
Well, there's this interesting thing that I think Twitter is doing,
but I know Facebook is doing for sure, which is really interesting. So you have what are the signals that a
human can provide at scale? Like in Twitter, it's retweet in Facebook, I think you can share,
I figure out that there's basic interactions, you can have comments and so on. Yeah, but there's
also in Facebook and YouTube has this too, is would you like to see more of this or would you like to
see less of this? They post that sometimes. And the thing that the neural net
that's learning from that has to figure out is the intent behind you saying I
want to see less of this. Did you see too much of this content already? You like it, but you don't want to see so much of it.
You already figured it out.
Great, great.
Or does this content not make you feel good?
There's so many interpretations that I like
to see less of this.
But if you get that kind of signal,
there's actually can create a really
powerfully curated
list of content that is fed to you every day.
That doesn't, it doesn't create an echo chamber or a silo, but actually just makes you feel good.
Yeah. In the, in the good way, which is like it challenges you, but it doesn't exhaust you and make you
kind of this, this, this is a, this weird animal.
I've been saying for a long time, if I went on Facebook one morning and they said, oh,
we're testing a new option.
Rather than showing you things we think you're going to like, we want to show you some things
that we think you will disagree with, but which we have some signals that suggest it's
of quality.
Like, now that sounds interesting.
Yeah, that sounds really interesting.
I want to see something where, you know, like,
oh, I don't agree with, so Larry Lessegas,
good friend of mine, founder of Creative Commons
and he's moved on to doing stuff
about corruption and politics and so on.
And I don't always agree with Larry,
but I always grapple with Larry
because he's so interesting and he's so thoughtful
that even when we don't agree,
I'm like, actually, I wanna hear him out, right? Because I'm going to learn from it.
And that doesn't mean I always come around to agree with him, but I'm going to understand
a perspective and that's really great feeling. Yeah, there's this interesting thing on social media
where people kind of accuse others of saying, well, you don't want to hear opinions that you
disagree with or ideas you disagree with. I think this is something that's thrown at me all the time. The reality is there's
literally almost nothing I enjoy more. I think the Q2F, because you have quite a wide range
of long conversations with a very diverse bunch of people. But there is a very,
there is like a very harsh drop off because what I like is high quality of
disagreement that really makes me think. And at a certain point there's a
threshold. It's a kind of a gray area. When the quality of the disagreement, it
just sounds like mocking and you're not really interested in a deep
understanding of the topic or you yourself don't seem to carry deep
understanding of the topic. Like there's something called intelligent squared debates. The main one is the British version with British accent and everything always sounds better. And the
brits seem to argue more intensely like they're
invigorated, they're energized by the debate. Those people I often disagree with basically everybody involved and it's so fun. I learned something. That's high quality.
If we could do that, if there's some way for me to click a button that says, um, filter out
lower quality just today. Sometimes show it to me because I want to be able to. But today,
I'm just not in the mood for the mockery. Yeah. Just high quality stuff. Even because,
even flatter, I want to, I want to get high quality arguments
for the flat earth. It would make me feel good because I would see, oh, that's really
interesting. Like, I never really thought in my mind to challenge the mainstream narrative
of general relativity, right, of a perception of physics. Maybe all of reality, maybe all of space time is an illusion.
That's really interesting.
I never really thought about,
let me consider that fully.
Okay, what's the evidence?
How do you test that?
What is what are the alternatives?
How would you be able to have such consistent perception
of a physical reality?
If it's all of it is an illusion,
all of us seem to share the same kind of perception of reality like what?
That's the kind of stuff I love, but not like the mockery of it, you know, that sort of arguments are between the party of the left and the party of the right.
I would say, no, it's actually the party of the kind and thoughtful and the party of the jerks is really, is really, really hit.
I mean, left and right, like, yeah, bring me somebody I disagree with politically, as long as they're thoughtful kind, we're going to have a, you know, a real discussion. I give an example of our article on abortion. So, you know, if you can bring together a
kind and thoughtful Catholic priest and a kind and thoughtful plan parent and activist,
and they're going to work together on the article on abortion,
that can be a really great thing if they're
both kind and thoughtful.
That's the important part.
They're never going to agree on the topic, but they will understand, Wikipedia is not
going to take a side, but Wikipedia is going to explain what the debate is about.
We're going to try to characterize it fairly.
It turns out you're kind and thoughtful people, even if they're quite ideological.
A Catholic priest is generally going to be quite ideological on the subject of abortion, but they can grapple
with ideas and they can discuss and they may feel very proud of the entry at the end of the day,
not because they suppress the other side's views, but because they think the case has been stated
very well that other people can come to understand it. And if you're highly ideological, you assume, I think, naturally, if people understood as much about this as I do, they'll probably
agree with me. You may be wrong about that, but that's often the case. So that's where, you know,
that's what I think we need to encourage more of in society generally is grappling with ideas
in a really thoughtful way. So is it possible if the majority of volunteers, editors of Wikipedia, really dislike Donald Trump?
Are they still able to write an article that empathizes with the perspective of, for
time at least, a very large percentage in the United States that were supporters of Donald
Trump and to have a full broad representation of him as a human being, him as a political leader,
him as a set of policies promised and implemented all that kind of stuff.
Yeah, I think so. And I think if you read the article, it's pretty good.
And I think if you read the article, it's pretty good. And I think a piece of that is within our community,
if people have the self-awareness to understand.
So I personally wouldn't go and edit the entry on Donald Trump.
I get emotional about it and I'm like, I'm not good at this.
And if I tried to do it, I would fail.
I wouldn't be a good Wikipedia.
So it's better if I just step back
and let people who are more dispassionate on this topic
edit it.
Whereas there are other topics
that are incredibly emotional to some people
where I can actually do quite well.
Like I'm gonna be okay.
Maybe we were discussing earlier the efficacy of masks. I'm like, oh, I think that's
an interesting problem, and I don't know the answer, but I can help catalog what's the
best evidence, and so I'm not going to get upset. I'm not going to get angry. I'm able
to be a good Wikipedia. So I think that's important. And I do think, though, in a related framework that the composition of the things we focus on a lot,
the Wikipedia volunteers are, we don't know the exact number, but let's say 80% plus male.
And there are certain demographic, they tend to be college educated, heavier on tech geeks than not,
you know, et cetera, et cetera. So it, there is a demographic to the community.
That's pretty much global. I mean, somebody said to me once, why is it only white men who
edit Wikipedia? And I said, we have obviously not met the Japanese Wikipedia community.
It's kind of a joke because the broader principle still stands. Who edits Japanese Wikipedia?
A bunch of geeky men, right? And women as well. So we do have women in the community. And
that's very important. But we do have women in the community and that's
very important. But we do think, okay, you know what? That does lead to some
problems. It leads to some content issues, simply because people write more
about what they know and what they're interested in. They'll tend to be
dismissive of things as being unimportant if it's not something that they
personally have an interest in.
I, you know, I like the example as a parent, I would say, our entries on early childhood development probably aren't as good as they should be, because a lot of the Wikipedia volunteers,
actually we're getting older, the Wikipedia, and so the demographic has changed a bit, but it's
fine. You know, it's like if you've got a bunch of 25-year-old tech geek dudes who
don't have kids they're just not going to be interested in early childhood development and if
they tried to write about it they probably wouldn't do a good job because they don't know anything
about it and somebody did a look at our entries on novelists who've won a major literary prize
and they looked at the male novelist
versus the female, and the male novelist
had longer and higher quality entries.
And why is that?
Well, it's not because, because I know hundreds
of Wikipedia, it's not because these are a bunch
of biased, sexist men who are like books
by women are not important.
It's like, no, actually, there is a gender kind of breakdown
of readership. There are books like hard science fiction, a classic example, hard science fiction,
mostly read by men. Other types of novels more read by women. And if we don't have women in
the community, then these award-winning clearly important novelists may have less coverage.
And not because anybody consciously thinks, oh, we don't like what?
A book by Maya Angelou, like, who cares?
She's a poet, like, that's not interesting.
No, but just because, well, people write what they know, they write what they're interested
in.
So we do think diversity in the community is really important, and that's one area where I do think it's really clear, but I can also say, you know what, actually
that also applies in the political sphere, like to say actually we do want kind and thoughtful
Catholic priests, kind and thoughtful conservatives, kind and thoughtful libertarians,
kind and thoughtful Marxists, you know, to come in, but the key is the kind and thoughtful libertarians, kind and thoughtful Marxists, you know, to come in,
but the key is the kind and thoughtful piece. So when people sometimes come to Wikipedia,
outraged by some, you know, dramatic things happen on Twitter, they come to Wikipedia with a
chip on their shoulder ready to do battle. And it just doesn't work out very well, you know.
And there's tribes in general where I think there's a responsibility on the larger group to be even kinder and more welcoming to the
smaller group. Yeah, we think that's really important. And so, you know, oftentimes
people come in and you know, there's a lot, when I talk about community health,
one of the aspects of that that we do think about a lot, that I think about a lot is not about politics. It's just like, how are we treating newcomers to the community?
And so I can tell you what our ideals are, what our philosophy is, but do we live up to
that? So, you know, the ideal is you come to Wikipedia, you know, we have rules, like
one of our fundamental rules
is ignore all rules, which is partly written that way
because it kind of peaks people's attention.
Like, what the hell kind of rule is that, you know?
But basically says, look, don't get nervous and depressed
about a bunch of, you know, what's the formatting
of your footnote, right?
So you shouldn't come to Wikipedia,
add a link and then get banned or yelled out because
it's not the right format.
Instead somebody should go, oh, hey, thanks for helping, but here's the link to how to
format, if you want to keep going, you might want to learn how to format a footnote.
And to be friendly and to be open and to say, oh, right, oh, you're new,
and you clearly don't know everything about Wikipedia.
And you know, sometimes in any community, that can be quite hard.
So people come in and they've got a great big idea.
And they're going to propose this to the Wikipedia community and they have no idea.
That's basically a perennial discussion we've had 7,000 times before.
And so then ideally, you would say to the person,
oh yeah, great, thanks.
Like a lot of people have, and here's where we got to,
and here's the nuanced conversation we've had
about that in the past that I think you'll find interesting.
And sometimes people are just like, oh God, another one,
who's come in with this idea which doesn't work
and they don't understand why.
I lose patience, but that's kind of human, you know.
But I think it just does require really thinking, you know, in a self-aware manner of like,
oh, I was once a newbie.
Actually, we do have, we have a great, I just did an interview with Emily Templewoods
who she was Wikipedia in the year.
She's just like a great well-known Wikipedia.
And I interviewed her for my book and she told me something I never knew. I apparently it's not
secret. Like she didn't reveal it to me. But is that when she started at Wikipedia, she was a
vandal. She came in and vandalized Wikipedia. And then basically what happened was she'd done some
sort of vandalized a couple of articles. And then somebody popped up on her talk page and said,
hey, like, why are you doing this?
Like, we're trying to make an encyclopedia here.
And this wasn't very kind.
And she felt so bad.
She's like, oh, right.
I didn't really think of it that way.
She just was coming in as, she was like 13 years old,
and combative, and, you know, like having fun,
and drolling a bit.
And then she's like, oh, actually,
oh, I see your point.
And became a great Wikipedia.
And so that's the ideal really.
It's that you don't just go throw a block, fuck off.
You go, hey, what goes?
Which is, I think the way we tend to treat things in real life,
if you've got somebody who's doing something
of nocturus in your friend group, you probably go, hey, like really, I don't know if you've noticed, but I think this person
is actually quite hurt that you keep making that joke about them.
And then they usually go, oh, you know what, I thought that was okay, I didn't, and then
they stop.
Or they keep it up and then everybody goes, well, you're there.
So.
Well, yeah, I mean, that's just an example that gives me faith in humanity that they were all capable and wanting to be kind to each other.
And in general, the fact that there's a small group of volunteers, they're able to contribute so much to the organization, the collection, the discussion of all of human knowledge.
It makes me so grateful to be part of this whole human project.
That's one of the reasons that Love will compete.
He gives me faith in humanity.
No, I once was at Wikimani's or annual conference and people come from all around the world,
like really active volunteers.
I was at the dinner, we were in Egypt, at Wikimani in Alexandria,
at the sort of closing dinner or whatever.
And a friend of mine came inside at the table and she's sort of
been in the movement more broadly, creative commons, she's not really a Wikipedia,
she'd come to the conference because she's into creative commons and all that.
So we have dinner and it just turned out I sat down at the table with most of the members
of the English Language Arbitration Committee.
And there are a bunch of very sweet geeky Wikipediaians.
And as we left the table, I said to her, it's really like I still find this kind of sense
of amazement.
Like we just had dinner with some of the most powerful people in English
language media because they're the people who are like the final court of appeal in English
Wikipedia. And thank goodness they're not media moguls, right? They're just a bunch of geeks
who are just like well-liked in the community because they're kind and thoughtful and they really
you know sort of think about things. I was like, that's great, love Wikipedia.
sort of think about things. I was like, that's great.
Love you to be here.
It's like to the degree that geeks run the best aspect
of human civilization brings me joy in all aspects.
And this is true in programming, like Linux,
like programmers, all, like people that kind of specialize
in a thing, and they don't really get caught up
into the mess of the big ring of
society. They just kind of do their thing and they value the craftsmanship of it, the competence of it.
If you've never heard of this or looked into it, you'll enjoy it. I read something recently
that I didn't even know about, but like the fundamental like time zones, and they change from time to time, you know, sometimes
a country will pass daylight savings or move it by a week, whatever.
There's a file that's on all, you know, sort of Unix based computers and basically all computers
end up using this file.
It's the official time zone file, but why is it official?
It's just this one guy.
It's like this guy and a group of community around him.
And basically something weird happened
and it broke something because he was on vacation.
And I'm just like, isn't that wild, right?
That you would think, I mean, first of all,
most people never even think about like,
how do computers know about time zones?
Well, they know because they just use this file,
which tells all the time zones and which dates they know because they just use this file which tells all the time
zones and which dates they change and all of that. But there's just one guy and he doesn't get paid
for it. It's just he's like, you know, with all the billions of people on the planet, he sort of
put his hand up and goes, yo, I'll take care of the time zones. And there's a lot, a lot, a lot of
programmers listening to this right now with PTSD about time zones.
And then there, I mean, there's on top of this one guy, there's other libraries,
the different programming languages that help manage the time zones for you, but still,
there's just within those, it's amazing just the packages, the libraries, how few people build
them out of their own love for building, for creating,
for community and all of that.
It's, I almost don't want to interfere with the natural habitat of the geek.
Right?
Like when you spot them in the wild, you just want to be like, well, careful.
Yeah.
That thing.
No, I'm pretty treasured.
I met a guy many years ago.
Lovely, really sweet guy.
He's running a bot on English
Wikipedia that I thought, wow, that's actually super clever.
What he had done is, his bot was like spell checking, but rather than simple spell checking,
what he had done is create a database of words that are commonly mistaken for other words.
They're spelled wrong, so I can't even give an example. And so the
word is, people often spell it wrong, but no spell checker catches it because it is another word.
And so what he did is he wrote a bot that looks for these words and then checks the sentence
around it for certain keywords. So in some context,
this isn't correct, but buoy and buoy.
People sometimes type B-O-Y when they mean B-O-U-Y.
So if he sees the word buoy, B-O-Y in an article,
he would look in the context and see,
is this a nautical reference?
And if it was, he didn't auto correct,
he just would flag it up to himself to go,
oh, check this one out.
And that's not a great example,
but he had thousands of examples.
I was like, oh, that's amazing.
Like I would have never thought to do that.
And I'm glad that somebody did.
And that's also part of the openness of the system.
And also, I think being a charity,
being this idea of like, actually,
this is a gift to the world that makes someone go, oh, well,
I'll put my hand up.
I see a little piece of things that I can make better because I'm a good programmer and
I can write this script to do this thing.
I'll find it fun.
Amazing.
Well, I got to ask about this big bold decision at the very beginning to not do advertisements
on the website.
In general, the philosophy of the business model will compete. big bold decision at the very beginning to not do advertisements on the website and just
in general the philosophy of the business model will compete.
It went behind that.
Yeah.
So I think most people know this, but we're a charity.
So in the US, you know, registered as a charity and we don't have any ads on the site.
And the vast majority of the money is from
donations, but the vast majority from small donors, so people giving 25 bucks or whatever. If you're listening to this, go donate.
Go donate.
Donate now.
I've done it so many times.
And we have millions of donors every year, but it's like a small percentage of people.
I would say in the early days, a big part of it was aesthetic almost as much as anything else. It was just like, I just think I don't really want ads and
Wikipedia. I just think it would be, there's a lot of reasons why it might not be good. And even
back then, I didn't think as much as I have since about a business model can tend to drive you in a certain place.
And really thinking that through in advance is really important because you might say,
yeah, we're really, really keen on community control and neutrality.
But if we had an advertising based business model, probably that would begin to erode.
Even if I believe in it very strongly, organizations
tend to follow the money in the DNA and the long run.
Things like, I mean, it's easy to think about some of the immediate problems.
If you go to read about, I don't know, Nissan, uh, Nissan car company.
And if you saw an ad for the new Nissan at the top of the page,
you might be like, did they pay for this or, you know, like,
like, do the advertisers have influence over the content?
Because you kind of wonder about that for all kinds of media and that undermines trust,
undermines trust, right?
But also things like, you know, we don't have clickbait headlines and Wikipedia.
You've never seen, you know, Wikipedia entries't have clickbait headlines and Wikipedia.
You've never seen Wikipedia entries
with all this kind of listicles.
The 10 funniest cat pictures, number seven, make it cry.
None of that kind of stuff, because there's no incentive,
no reasons to do that.
Also, there's no reason to have an algorithm to say,
actually, we're going to use our algorithm to drive you
to stay on the website longer.
We're gonna use the algorithm to drive you to,
it's like, you're reading about Queen Victoria.
There's nothing to sell you when you're reading
about Queen Victoria.
Let's move you on to Las Vegas,
because actually the ad revenue around who tells
on Las Vegas is quite good.
So we don't have that sort of,
there's no incentive for the organization to go,
oh, let's move people around to things
that have better ad revenue.
Instead, it's just like, oh,
well, what's most interesting to the community
and just to make those links.
So that decision just seemed obvious to me,
but as I say, it was less of a business decision and more of
an aesthetic.
It's like, oh, this is how I like Wikipedia, it doesn't have ads.
I don't really want, you know, these early days, like a lot of the ads, that was well before
the era of really quality ad targeting and all that.
So a lot of banners, banners, punched the monkey ads and all that kind of nonsense.
And so, you know, but there was no guarantee.
There was no, it was not really clear how could we fund this?
You know, like it was pretty cheap, it still is quite cheap compared to, you know, most,
you know, we don't have 100,000 employees and all of that.
But would we be able to raise money through donations?
And so I remember the first time that we did, like really did a, a,
a donation campaign was on a Christmas day in 2003.
I think it was. There was, we had three servers,
database servers and two front end servers,
and they were all the same size or whatever.
And two of them crashed.
They broke.
Like, I don't even know, remember now, like the hard drive.
It was like, it was Christmas day.
So I scrambled on Christmas day to sort of
go into the database server, which fortunately survived,
and have it become a front-end server as well.
And this site was really slow, and it wasn't working very well.
And I was like, OK, it's time.
We need to do a fundraiser.
And so I was hoping to raise $20,000 in a month's time, but we raised nearly $30,000 within
two, three weeks' time.
So that was the first proof point of like,
oh, like we put a banner up and people will donate.
Like we just explain we need the money
and people are like, already we were very small back then
and people are like, oh yeah, like I love this,
I wanna contribute.
Then over the years we've become more sophisticated
about the fundraising campaigns
and we've tested a lot of different messaging and so forth.
What we used to think, I remember one year we really went heavy with, we have great ambitions to,
you know, the idea of what could be the as a free encyclopedia for every single person on the planet.
So what about the languages of Sub-Saharan Africa?
So I thought, okay, we're trying to raise money,
we need to talk about that because it's really important and near and dear to my heart,
and just instinctively knowing nothing about charity fundraising, you see it all around, it's like,
oh, charity's always mentioned, like the poor people they're helping. So let's talk about that,
didn't really work as well. The pitch that, like this is very vague and very sort of broad,
but the pitch that works better than any other in general
is a fairness pitch of like,
you use it all the time, you should probably chip in.
And most people are like, yeah, you know what?
My life would suck without Wikipedia, I use it constantly
and whatever I should chip in.
Like it just seems like the right thing to do.
And that, and there's many variants on that, obviously.
And that's really, it works.
And people are like, oh yeah, we can be,
I love Wikipedia and I shouldn't.
And so sometimes people say,
why are you always begging for money on the website?
And I've said, it's not that often, it's not that much,
but it does happen.
and I've just not that often, it's not that much, but it does happen.
They're like, why don't you just get Google
and Facebook and Microsoft, why don't they pay for it?
And I'm like, I don't think that's really the right answer.
And then it starts to creep in.
Influence starts to creep in,
and questions start to creep in.
Like the best funding for Wikipedia is the small donors.
We also have major donors, right?
We have high net worth people who donate,
but we always are very careful about that sort of thing
to say, wow, that's really great and really important.
But we can't let that become influence
because that would just be really quite, yeah.
Not good for Wikipedia.
I would love to know how many times I visited Wikipedia,
how much time I spent on it,
because I have a general sense
that is the most useful site I've ever used,
competing maybe with Google search,
which ultimately lands on Wikipedia.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But if I were just reminded of,
hey, remember all those times your life
was me better because of the site? Yeah, I think I would be much more like, yeah, why did I waste
money on site xyz when I could be like, I should be giving a lot of it here? Well,
you know, the Guardian newspaper has a similar model, which is they have ads, but they also,
there's no paywall, but they just encourage people to donate.
And they do that. Like, I've sometimes seen a banner saying,
no, this is your 134th article you've read this year, would you like to donate? And I think that's, I think it's effective. I mean, they're testing. But also, I wonder,
just for some people, if they just don't feel like guilty and then think, well, I shouldn't
bother them so much. I don't know. It and then think well, I shouldn't bother them so much
It's a good question. I don't know the answer. I guess it's the thing I could also turn on because that'll make me
I feel like legitimately there's some sites and speaks to our social media
discussion
Wikipedia
Unquestionably makes me feel better about myself. Mm-hmm. If I spend time on it like there's some websites where I'm like if I spend time on it. Like, there's some websites where I'm like,
if I spend time on Twitter, sometimes I'm like,
I regret.
There's, I think Elon talks about this,
minimize the number of regretted minutes.
Yeah.
My number of regretted minutes on Wikipedia is like zero.
I don't remember a time.
I've just discovered this,
a start following on Instagram,
a page depth of Wikipedia.
Oh yeah.
There's like crazy Wikipedia page.
There's no Wikipedia page that's not.
I gave her a media contributor over the year award this year
because she's so great.
Yes, she's amazing.
Depth of Wikipedia is so fun.
So yeah, so that's the kind of interesting point that I don't even
know if there's a competitor there may be the sort of programming stack over flow type
of websites, but everything else there's always a trade off. There's a big ice probably
because the ad driven model because there's an incentive to pull you into clickbait.
Yeah. And Wikipedia has no clickbait. It's all about the quality of the knowledge and
the wisdom and so wisdom That's right
And I also like Stack Overwall although I wonder I wonder what you think of this
I
So I only program for fun as a hobby and I don't have enough time to do it, but I do and
I'm not very good at it. So therefore I end up on Stack Overflow quite a lot trying to figure out what's going wrong
And I have really transitioned to
using chat GBT, much more for that because I can often find the answer clearly explained,
and it just works better than sifting through threads. And I kind of feel bad about that,
because I do love stuck overflow in their community. I mean, I'm assuming I haven't read anything
about in the news about it. I'm assuming they are keenly aware of this and they're thinking about how can we sort of use this chunk of
knowledge that we've got here and provide a new type of interface where you can query it with
a question and actually get an answer that's based on the answers that we've had. I don't know.
And I think that overflow currently has policies
against using GPT. There's a contentious kind of tension. Of course, yeah, yeah, but they're
trying to still figure that out. And so we are similar in that regard. Obviously, all the things
we've talked about, like, chat GPT makes stuff up, and it makes up references. So our community
has already put into place some policies about it.
But roughly speaking, there's always more nuance.
But roughly speaking, it's sort of like you,
the human, are responsible for what you put into Wikipedia.
So if you use chat to BT, you better check it.
There's a lot of great use cases of, you know, like,
oh, well, I'm not a native speaker of German
by kind of I'm pretty good. I'm not talking about myself, German, but I kind of am pretty good.
I'm not talking about myself, hypothetical meat.
It's pretty good.
And I kind of just want to run my edit through chat GBT in German to go make sure my grammar
is okay.
That's actually cool.
Does it make you sad that people might use increasingly used chat GBT for something where they would previously use Wikipedia.
So basically use it to answer basic questions about the Eiffel Tower.
Yeah, no.
And where the answer really comes at the source of it from Wikipedia, but they're using this
as an interface.
Yeah, no, no, that's completely fine.
I mean, part of it is our ethos has always been, here's our gift to the world, make something.
So if the knowledge is more accessible to people, even if they're not coming through us,
that's fine.
Now, obviously, we do have certain business model concerns, right?
And we've talked about where we've had more conversation about this. This whole GPT thing is new. Things like, if you ask Alexa,
what is the Eiffel Tower?
And she reads you the first two sentences from Wikipedia
and doesn't say it's from Wikipedia.
And they've recently started citing Wikipedia.
Then we worry, oh, if people don't know
they're getting the knowledge from us,
are they gonna donate money?
Or are they just thinking, oh, what's Wikipedia for? I can just ask Alexa. It's like, well, Alexa only knows
anything because she read Wikipedia. So we do think about that, but it doesn't bother
me in the sense of like, I want people always come to Wikipedia first. But we're also, you
know, had a great demo, like literally just hacked together over a weekend by our head of machine learning, where he did this
little thing to say, you could ask any question. And he was just knocking it together. So he
used the open AI's API just to make a demo, ask a question, why did ducks fly south for
winter? Just the kind of thing you think, oh, I might just Google for that.
I might start looking in Wikipedia, I don't know.
And so what he does, he asks,
what are some Wikipedia entries that might answer this?
Then he grabbed those Wikipedia entries,
said, here's some Wikipedia entries,
answer this question based only on the information in this.
And he had pretty good results
and it kind of prevented them making stuff up.
Not, it's just a he hacked together weekend, but what it made me think about was, oh,
okay. So now we've got this huge body of knowledge that in many cases, you're like, oh,
I'm really, I want to know about Queen Victoria. I'm just going to go read the Wikipedia
entry and it's going to take me through her life and so forth.
But other times you've got a specific question and maybe we could have a better search experience
where you can come to Wikipedia, ask your specific question, get your specific answer that's
from Wikipedia, including links to the articles you might want to read next. And that's just a step
forward. That's just using a new type of technology to make
the extraction of information from this body of text into my brain faster and easier.
So I think that's kind of cool.
I would love to see a chat GPT grounding into websites like Wikipedia and the other comparable
website to me will be like Wolfram Alpha for more mathematical knowledge, that kind of stuff.
So grounding, like taking you to a page that is really crafted.
As opposed to, like the moment you start actually taking you to like
journalists, websites, like news, websites,
stuff's getting a little hiffy. Yeah, getting a little...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because you're now in a land that has a wrong incentive. Right. Yeah. Yeah, getting a little yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, because they have you're now in a land that has a wrong incentive
Right. Yeah, yeah, and you need somebody to have filtered through that and sort of tried to knock off the rough edges
Yeah, no, it's it's very I think that's exactly right and I think
You know, I I think that kind of
Grounding is I think they're working really hard on it. I think that kind of grounding is, I think they're working really hard on it.
I think that's really important.
And that actually, so if you ask me to step back and be like very business like about our business
model and where's it going to go for us, and are we going to lose half our donations because
everybody's just going to stop coming to Wikipedia and go to CHGBT, I think grounding will help a lot
because frankly, most questions people have if they provide proper
links, we're going to be at the top of that just like we are in Google. So we're still
going to get tons of recognition and tons of traffic just from, even if it's just the
moral, um, properness of saying, here's my source. Um, so I think, I think we're going
to be all right in that, in that. Yeah. And the close partnership of, if the, if the
model is fine tune is constantly retrained
that Wikipedia is one of the primary places where if you want to change what the model
knows, one of the things you should do is contribute to Wikipedia or clarifying what
it is.
Yeah, yeah.
Or elaborate, expand all that kind of stuff.
You mentioned all of us F controversies, I have to ask.
Do you find the controversy of whether
you are the sole founder or the co-founder of Wikipedia, ironic, absurd, interesting, important?
What are your comments? I would say unimportant. Not that interesting. I mean, one of the things that
people are sometimes surprised to hear me say is I actually think Larry
Singer doesn't get enough credit for his early work in Wikipedia, even though I think co-founders
not the right title for that.
So you know, like he had a lot of impact and a lot of great work and I just scream a lot
of things since and all that and that's fine.
So yeah, no, to me that's like, it's one of these things that the media love
a falling out story.
So they wanna make a big deal out of it,
and I'm just like, yeah, no.
So there's a lot of interesting engineering contributions
in the early days, like you were saying,
there's debates about how to structure it,
what the, is this thing that we're doing,
and there's important people that contributed to that.
Yeah, definitely.
So he also, you said you had some disagreements.
Larry Sangher said that nobody should trust Wikipedia.
And that Wikipedia seems to assume that there's only one legitimate, defensible version
of the truth on any controversial question.
That's not how Wikipedia used to be.
I presume you disagree with that.
Yeah.
So let me just straight up, I disagree.
Like go and read any Wikipedia entry on a controversial topic and what you'll see is a really diligent
effort to explain all the relevant sides. So yeah, just disagreeing. So on controversial questions,
you think perspectives are generally represented? I mean, it has to do with the kind of attention
between the mainstream and the non-mainstream
that we're talking about.
Yeah, no, I mean, for sure.
Like to take this area of discussion seriously is to say, yeah, you know what?
Actually, that is a big part of what Wikipedia and spend their time grappling with is to say, you know, how do we figure out whether a less popular
view is pseudoscience? Is it just a less popular view that's gaining acceptance in the mainstream?
Is it fringe versus crackpot, etc., etc. And that debate is what you've got to do.
There's no choice about having that debate
of grappling with something.
And I think we do.
And I think that's really important.
And I think if anybody said to the Wikipedia community,
G, you should stop covering minority viewpoints
on this issue, I think they would say,
I don't even understand why you would say that.
Like we have to sort of grapple with minority viewpoints
in science and politics and so on.
But it's, and like this is one of the reasons why,
there is no magic simple answer to all these things.
It's really contextual, it's case by case.
It's like, you know, you've got to really say, okay,
what is the context here? How do you do it? And you've always got to be open to correction
and to change and to sort of challenge and always be sort of serious about that.
I think what happens again with social media is when there is that grappling process in
Wikipedia and a decision is made to remove a paragraph or to remove a thing
or to say a thing, you're going to notice the one direction of the oscillation of the grappling
and not the correction. You're going to highlight that and say, how come this person,
I don't know, I want to maybe legitimacy of elections, that's the thing that comes up,
Donald Trump maybe. I can give a really good example, which is there was this sort of dust up about the definition
of recession in Wikipedia. So the accusation was, and the accusation was often quite ridiculous
in extreme, which is under pressure from the Biden administration. We could be the change, the definition of recession
to make Biden look good.
Or we did it not under pressure,
but because we're a bunch of lunatic leftists and so on.
And then, you know, when I see something like that
in the press, I'm like, oh, dear, like what's happened here?
How do we do that?
Because I always just accept things for five seconds first.
And then I go and I look and I'm like, you know what,
that's literally completely not what happened.
What happened was one editor thought the article needed
restructuring.
So the article is always said so that the traditional kind
of loose definition of recession is two quarters
of negative growth.
But there's always been within economics,
within important agencies in different countries
around the world, a lot of nuance around that.
And there's other factors that go into it and so forth.
And it's just an interesting complicated topic.
And so the article has always had the definition
of two quarters.
The only thing that really changed was moving that
from the lead from the top paragraph to further down.
And then news stories appeared saying, Wikipedia has changed the definition of recession. And then new stories appeared saying Wikipedia has changed the
definition of recession. And then we got a huge rush of trolls coming in. So the article was
temporarily protected. I think only semi-protected. And people were told go to the talk page to discuss.
Anyway, it was a dust up that was, you know, when you look at it as a Wikipedia and you're like,
oh, like this is a really routine kind of editorial debate. Another example, which unfortunately our friend Elon fell for,
I would say, is the Twitter files.
So there was an article called the Twitter files,
which is about these files that were released once Elon
took control of Twitter and he released internal documents.
And what happened was somebody nominated it for a deletion, but even the nomination said,
this is actually, this is mainly about the Hunter Biden laptop controversy.
Shouldn't this information be there instead?
So anyone can, like, it takes exactly one human being anywhere on the planet to propose
something for deletion.
And that triggers a process where people discuss it, which within a few hours, it was what we call snowball closed.
I.e., this doesn't have a snowball's chance and hell of passing.
So an admin goes, yeah, wrong.
Yeah.
And close the debate, and that was it.
That was the whole thing that happened.
And so nobody proposed suppressing the information.
Nobody proposed, it wasn't important.
It was just like, editorally boring internal question.
And you know, so sometimes people read stuff like that and they're like,
you see, look at these leftists, they're trying to suppress the truth again.
It's like, well, slow down a second and come and look, like literally it's not what happened.
Yeah.
So I think the right is more sensitive to censorship.
And so they, they will more likely highlight,
there's more virality to highlighting something
that looks like censorship in any walks of life.
And this moving a paragraph from one place,
another or removing it, so on as part of the regular
grappling of a cappedia can make a hell of a good article.
Or YouTube video.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It sounds really enticing and intriguing and surprising to most people because they're
like, I'm reading Wikipedia.
It doesn't seem like a crack pot left to this website.
It seems pretty kind of dull, really, in its own geeky way.
Well, that's how I...
So that makes a good story.
That's how it is.
Oh, am I being misled because there's a shadowy cabal of Jimmy Wales.
I generally, I read political stuff, I mentioned to you that I'm traveling to have some very
difficult conversation with high profile figures, both in the war in Ukraine and in Israel
and Palestine.
And I read the Wikipedia articles around that. And I also
read books on the conflict and the history of the different regions. And I find the Wikipedia
articles to be very balanced. And there's many perspectives being represented. But then I asked
myself, well, am I one of them leftist crackpots? They can't see the truth. I mean, it's something
I asked myself all the time, forget
the leftist, just crackpot and share. Am I just being a sheep in accepting it? I think
that's an important question to always ask, but not too much. Yeah. A little bit, but not
too much. No, I think we always have to challenge ourselves of like, what do I potentially have wrong? Well, you mentioned pressure from government.
You've criticized Twitter for the allowing giving in to Turkey's government censorship.
There's also conspiracy theories or accusations of Wikipedia being open to pressure from government
to government organizations of BI and all this kind of stuff, is that,
right.
What is the philosophy about pressure from government and censorship?
So, we're super hardcore on this.
We've never bowed down to government pressure anywhere in the world and we never will.
And we understand that we're hardcore. And actually, there is a bit of nuance
about how different companies respond to this. But our response has always been just to
say no. And if they threaten to block, well, I'm not going to sell out, you're going to
lose Wikipedia. And that's been very successful for us as a strategy, because governments
know they can't just casually threaten to block Wikipedia or block us for
two days and we're going to cave in immediately to get back into the market.
And that's what a lot of companies have done.
And I don't think that's good.
We can go one level deeper and say, I'm actually quite sympathetic.
Like if you have staff members in a certain country and they are at physical risk, you've
got to put that into your equation.
So I understand that.
Like if if Elon said, actually, I've got 100 staff members on the ground in such
as such a country.
And if we don't comply, somebody's going to get arrested and it could be quite
serious.
Okay, that's a tough one, right?
That's that's actually really hard.
But yeah, no.
And then the FBI one, no, no, we,
like the criticism I saw, I kind of prepared for this
because I saw people responding to your requests
for questions and I was like, somebody's like,
oh, well, don't you think it was really bad
that you da da da da, and I was like,
I actually reached out to Stephenson,
can you just make sure I've got my facts right?
And the answer is we
received zero requests of any kind from the FBI or any of the other government agencies for any changes to content in Wikipedia. And had we received those requests at the level of the Wikimedia
Foundation, we would have said it's not our like we can't do anything because Wikipedia is written
by the community. And so the Wikimedia Foundation can't change the content of Wikipedia without causing,
I mean, God, that would be a massive controversy.
You can't even imagine.
What we did do, and this is what I've done, I've been to China and met with the Minister
of Propaganda.
We've had discussions with governments all around the world, not because we want to do their
bidding, but because we don we want to do their bidding,
but because we don't want to do their bidding,
but we also don't want to be blocked
and we think actually having these conversations
are really important.
Now, there's no threat of being blocked in the US.
Like, that's just never gonna happen.
There is the first amendment.
But in other countries around the world, it's like, okay,
what are you upset about?
Let's have the conversation.
Like, let's understand and let's have a dialogue about it
so that you can understand where we come from and what we're doing, and why. And then, you know, sometimes
it's like, gee, like if somebody complains that something's bad and Wikipedia, whoever
they are, don't care who they are, could be you, could be the government, could be the
Pope. I don't care who they are. It's like, oh, okay, well our responsibility is we keep idiots. They go, oh, hold on, let's check.
Right? Is that right or wrong? Is there something that we've got wrong in Wikipedia?
Not because you're threatening to block us, but because we want Wikipedia to be correct.
So we do have these dialogues with people. And, you know, a big part of, like, what was going on with,
you might call it pressure on social media companies
or dialogue with depending on, you know,
as we talk to earlier, grapple with the language
depending on what your view is.
In our case, it was really just about,
oh, okay, right, they wanna have a dialogue about
a COVID information, misinformation.
We are this enormous source of information, which the world depends on.
We're going to have that conversation, right? We're happy to say, here's, you know, if they say, how do you know
that Wikipedia is not going to be pushing some crazy anti-vax narrative?
First, I mean, I think it's somewhat inappropriate for a government
to be asking pointed questions in a way that implies possible penalties. I'm not sure
that ever happened because we would just go, I don't know, the Chinese blocked us and
so it goes, right? We're not going to cave into any kind of government pressure, but
whatever the appropriateness of what they were doing,
I think there is a rule for government in just saying, let's understand the information ecosystem,
let's think about the problem of misinformation, disinformation in society,
particularly around election security, all these kinds of things.
So, I think it would be irresponsible of us to get a call from a government
agency and say, you know, why don't you just fuck off your government. But it would also
be irresponsible to go, oh, dear, government agencies, it's not happy. Let's fix Wikipedia.
So the FBI loves this.
So, you know, when you say you want to have discussions with the Chinese government or
with organizations like CDC and WHO, it's to thoroughly
understand what the mainstream narrative is so that it can be properly represented but
not drive what the articles are.
Well, it's actually important to say, like, whatever the Wikimedia Foundation thinks has
no impact on what's in Wikipedia.
So it's more about saying to them, right,
we understand you're the world health organization
or you're whoever, and part of your job
is to sort of public health is about communications.
You want to understand the world.
So it's more about, oh, well, let's explain
how Wikipedia works.
So it's more about explaining how Wikipedia works
and like, hey, it's the volunteers.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a battle of ideas and here's how the sources are used.
Yeah, what are the legitimate sources and what not a legitimate sources.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, I suppose there's some battle about what is a legitimate source.
There could be statements made that CDC.
I mean, like there's a government organizations in general
have sold themselves to be the place where you go for expertise. And some of that has
been to a small degree raised in question over the response to the pandemic.
Well, I think in many cases, and this goes back to my topic of trust. So there
were definitely cases of public officials, public organizations, where I felt like they lost
the trust of the public because they didn't trust the public. And so the idea is like, we
really need people to take this seriously and take actions. Therefore, we're going to put out some overblown claims because it's going to scare people
into behaving correctly.
You know what?
That might work for a little while, but it doesn't work in the long run because suddenly
people go from a default stance of like the Center for Disease Control, very well respected scientific organization,
sort of, I don't know, they've got fault in Atlanta
with the last file of smallpox or whatever it is,
that people think about them.
And to go, oh, right, these are scientists
we should actually take seriously and listen to,
and they're not politicized.
And they're, you know, it's like, okay.
And if you put out statements,
I don't know if the CDC did,
but health organization, whoever,
that are provably false.
And also provably, you kind of knew there were false,
but you did it to scare people
because you wanted them to do the right thing.
It's like, no, you know what,
that's not gonna work in the long run.
Like you're gonna lose people,
and now you've got a bigger problem,
which is a lack of trust in science,
a lack of trust in authorities who are, you know, by and large, they're like quite boring government
bureaucrat scientists who just are trying to help the world.
Well, I've been criticized and I've been torn on this.
I've been criticized for criticizing Anthony Fauci too hard.
The degree to which I criticized him is because he's
a leader and I'm just observing the effect in the loss of trust in the institutions like
the NIH that where I personally know there's a lot of incredible scientists doing incredible
work. And I have to blame the leaders for the effects on the distrust and the scientific work that they're doing because
um of what I perceive as basic human flaws of communication, of arrogance, of ego, of politics, all those kinds of things. Now you could say you're being too harsh,
possible, but I think that's the whole point of free speech is you can criticize the lead people who lead
whole point of free speech as you can criticize the lead people who lead. Leaders, unfortunately, or fortunately, are responsible for the effects on society.
To me, Anthony Fauci, or whoever in the scientific position around the pandemic, had an opportunity
to have a FDR moment or to get everybody together and inspire about the power of science to rapidly develop a vaccine
that saves us from this pandemic and future pandemic that can threaten the well-being of human
civilization. This was epic and awesome and sexy. And to me, when I'm talking to people about
science, it's anything but sexy in terms of the viralogy and biology development. Because it's
been politicized, it's inky,
and people just don't wanna,
don't talk to me about the vaccine.
I understand, I understand.
I got vaccinated, just let's switch topics.
Right, right, right, yeah.
Yeah, well it's interesting,
because as I say, I live in the UK,
and I think all these things are a little less politicized
there, and I haven't played close enough attention
to Fauci to have a really strong view. I'm sure I would disagree with some things. I definitely,
I remember hearing at the beginning of the pandemic as I'm unwrapping my Amazon package with
the masks I bought because I heard there's a pandemic and I just was like I want some in 95 masks, please.
And they were saying don't buy masks and the motivation was because they didn't want to be
shortages in hospitals. Fine. But they were also statements of masks won't, they're not effective
and they won't help you. And then the complete about face to your ridiculous if you're not wearing them,
you know, it's just like, no, like that about face
just lost people from day one.
The distrust and the intelligence of the public
to deal with nuance, to deal with the insertion.
Yeah, this is exactly what, you know,
I think this is where the Wikipedia neutral point of view
is and should be an idealion.
Obviously every article and everything we and everything you know me now
and you know how I am about these things. But ideally it's to say, look, we're happy to
show you all the perspectives. This is Planned Parenthood's view and this is Catholic Church
view. And we're going to explain that and we're going to try to be thoughtful and put in
the best arguments from all sides. Because I trust you, like you read that,
and you're gonna be more educated,
and you're gonna begin to make it.
I mean, I can just talk in the UK,
the government, da da da da,
when we found out in the UK that very high level
government officials were not following the rules
they had put on everyone else,
I moved from, I had just become a UK citizen
just a little while before the pandemic.
And, you know, it's kind of emotional.
Like, you get a passport in a new country
and you feel quite good and I did my oath to the queen
and then I dragged the poor old lady out
to tell us all to be good.
And I was like, we're British
and we're gonna do the right things.
And, you know, it's gonna be tough,
but we're gonna, you know,
so you have that kind of Dunkirk spirit moment.
And you're like following the rules to a tee,
and then suddenly it's like,
well, they're not following the rules.
So suddenly I shifted personally from,
I'm gonna follow the rules,
even if I don't completely agree with them,
I'll still follow,
because I think we've got all chimped together
to like, you know what,
I'm gonna make wise and thoughtful decisions
for myself and my family. And that generally is going to mean following the rules, but it's
basically, you know, when they're, you know, at certain moments in time, like, you're
not allowed to be in an outside space unless you're exercising. I'm like, I think I can
sit in a part and read a book. Yeah. Like, it's going to be fine. Like, that's irrational
rule, which I would have been following just personally of like, I it's going to be fine. Like, that's irrational rule, which I would have been following,
just personally, of like, I'm just going to do the right thing. Yeah. And the loss of trust,
I think, at scale, was probably harmful to science. And to me, the scientific method and the
scientific communities is one of the biggest hopes, at least to me, for the survival and the
thriving of human civilization.
Absolutely.
And I, you know, I think you see some of the ramifications of this.
There's always been like pretty anti-science, anti-vax people.
Okay, that's always been a thing, but I feel like it's bigger now, simply because of
that lowering of trust.
So a lot of people, yeah, maybe it's like you say,
a lot of people are like, yeah, I got vaccinated,
and I really don't wanna talk about this
because it's so toxic, you know?
And that's unfortunate,
because I think people should say,
what an amazing thing.
And you know, there's also a whole range of discourse
around if this were a disease that was primarily killing babies.
I think people's emotions about it would have been very different, right or wrong, than
the fact that when you really looked at the sort of death rate of getting COVID, well,
it's really dramatically different. If you're late in life, this was really dangerous.
And if you're 23 years old, yeah, well, it's not great.
Like, and long COVID's a thing and all of that.
But, and I think some of the public communications,
again, we're failing to properly contextualize it.
Not all of it, you know, it's a complicated matter,
but yeah.
Let me read you a Reddit comment that received two likes.
Oh.
And two whole people liked it.
Yeah, two people liked it.
And I don't know, maybe you can comment on whether
there's truth to it, but I just found it interesting
because I've been doing a lot of research
on what we were doing too recently.
So this is about Hitler.
Here's, it's a long, it's a long statement.
I was there when a big push was made to fight bias at Wikipedia.
Our target became getting the Hitler article to be Wiki's featured article.
The idea was that the voting body only wanted articles that were good PR and especially articles
about socially liberal topics.
So the Hitler article had to be two to three times better and more academically researched to
beat the competition. This bias seems to hold today. For example, the current list of political
featured articles at a glance seems to have only two books, one on anarchism and one on Karl Marx.
Surely we're not going to say they have only ever been
two articles about political non-biography books worth being featured, especially compared to
200 plus video games. That's the only topics with good books or socialism and anarchy.
Would you have any interesting comments on this kind of feature? Yeah. How the feature is selected.
Maybe Hitler, because he's a special figure.
I love that.
I love that.
No, I love the comparison to how many video games I've been.
And that definitely speaks to my earlier as like, if you've got a lot of young geeky
men who really like video games, that doesn't necessarily
get you to the right place in every respect.
Certainly, yeah, so here's a funny story.
I woke up one morning to a bunch of journalists in Germany trying to get in touch with me, because
German language Wikipedia chose to have as
the featured article of the day, swastika. And people were going crazy about it. And some people
were saying it's illegal, has German Wikipedia been taken over by Nazi sympathizers and so on.
And it turned out, it's not illegal, like discussing the swastika, using the swastika,
out, it's not illegal like discussing the swastika, using the swastika as a political campaign and using it in certain ways, is illegal in Germany in a way that it wouldn't be in the
US because of First Amendment. But in this case, it was like actually part of the point
is the swastika symbol is from other cultures as well. And they just thought it was interesting.
And I did joke to the community, I'm like, please don't put the swastika
on the front page without warning me
because I'm gonna get a look.
Now it wouldn't be me, it's the foundation.
I'm not that much on the front lines.
And so I would say that to put Hitler
on the front page of Wikipedia,
it is a special topic and you would wanna say,
yeah, let's be really careful that it's really, really good
before we do that because if we put it on the front page and it's got and it's not good enough, that could be a problem. There's no inherent reason. Like,
clearly World War II is a very popular topic in Wikipedia. It's like, start on the history channel.
Like, people, it's a fascinating period of history that people are very interested in. And then on the other piece, like anarchism and Karl Marx,
or not Marx, yeah.
I mean, that's interesting.
I'm surprised to hear that not more political books
or topics have made it to the front page.
Now we're taking this read a comment.
I mean, as it's completely, as it's about you.
Yeah, but I'm trusting.
So I think that's probably is right.
They probably did have the list up.
No, I think that piece, the piece about
how many of those featured articles have been video games.
And if it's disproportionate, I think we should,
the community should go actually what's gone,
like that doesn't seem quite right.
You know, I mean, you can imagine
that because you're looking for an article to be on the front page of Wikipedia, you want to have a bit of diversity in it, you want it to be not always something that's
really popular that week.
So like, I don't know, the last couple of weeks, maybe succession, a big finale of succession
might lead you to think, oh, let's put succession on the front page, that's going to be popular. In other cases,
you kind of want to pick something super obscure and quirky because people also find that
interesting and fun. So yeah, don't know, but you don't want it to be video games most of the time.
That sounds quite bad. Well, let me ask you just for as somebody who's seen the whole thing the development of the millions of articles
Big and possible question. What's your favorite article? My favorite article? Well, I've got an
amusing answer
Which is possibly also true
There's an article in Wikipedia called
inherently funny words. And one of the reasons I love it is when it was created early
in the history of Wikipedia, it kind of became like a dumping ground. People would just
come by and write in any word that they thought sounded funny. And then it was nominated
for deletion because somebody's like, this is just a dumbing around like people are putting more guns and nonsense in.
And in that deletion debate, somebody came forward and said essentially, wait a second, hold on,
this is actually a legitimate concept in the theory of humor and comedy and a lot of famous
comedians and humors have written about it. And it's, you know, it's actually a legitimate topic.
So then they went through and they meticulously referenced every word that was in there and
threw out a bunch that weren't. And so it becomes this really interesting. Now, my biggest
disappointment, and it's the right decision to make, because there was no source, but it was a picture of a cow, but there was a rope around its head,
tying on some horns onto the cow.
So it was kind of a funny looking picture.
It looked like a bull with horns, but it's just like a normal milk cow.
And below it, the caption said, according to some cow is an inherently funny word,
which is just hilarious to me, partly because the according to some sounds a lot like Wikipedia.
But there was no source, so it went away and I feel very sad about that, but I've always liked that.
And I actually, the reason depths of Wikipedia amuses me so greatly is because it does highlight
me so greatly is because it does highlight really interesting obscure stuff and you're like, wow, I can't believe somebody wrote about that in Wikipedia, it's quite amusing. And sometimes
there's a bit of rye humor in Wikipedia, there's always a struggle. You're not trying to be funny,
but occasionally a little inside humor can be quite healthy.
Apparently, words with a letter K are funny.
There's a lot of really well-researched stuff on this page.
Yeah, it's actually exciting.
And I should mention for Duff's The Wikipedia,
it's run by Annie Rowarda.
That's right, Annie.
And let me just read off some of the pages.
Octopolis and Octolantis. Oh, yeah, that was our two separate non-human underwater settlements built by the gloomy
Octopuses in Jarvis Bay, East Australia, the first settlement named Octopolis by biologist
was founded in 2009.
The individual structures in Octopolis consists of boroughs around a piece of human
Detritus believed to be scrap metal and it goes on in this way
Satiric misspelling least concern species humans were formally assessed as a species of least concern in
2008 I think Hitchhiker. guy to the galaxy would slightly disagree. And last one, let me just say, friendship paradox is the phenomena first observed by the
sociologist Scott Feld in 1991 that on average, an individual's friends have more friends
than that individual.
Oh, that's pretty interesting.
That's the kind of thing that makes you want to
like it sounds implausible at first because shouldn't everybody have on average about the same
number of friends as all their friends. So you really want to dig into the math of that and really
think, oh, why would that be true? And it's one way to feel more lonely in a mathematically
rigorous way. Somebody also on Reddit asks,
I would love to hear some war stories from behind the scenes.
Is there something that we haven't mentioned
that was particularly difficult in this entire journey
you're on with Wikipedia?
I mean, it's hard to say.
I mean, so part of what I always say about myself
is that I'm a pathological optimist.
So I always think everything is fine.
And so things that other people might find a struggle, I'm just like, oh, well, this is the thing
we're doing today. So that's kind of about me. And it's actually, I'm aware of this about myself.
So I do like to have a few pessimistic people around me to keep me a bit on balance.
Yeah, I mean, I would say some of the some of the hard things, I mean, there were there were hard moments like when two out of three servers crashed on Christmas day website and the traffic to the website was phenomenal
and great.
The growth of the community, and in fact the healthy growth of the community was fine.
And then the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit I set up to own and operate Wikipedia, as a
small organization, it had a lot of growing pains.
And you know, that was like, that was the piece that's just like many companies
or many organizations that are in a fast growth.
It's like, you've heard the wrong people or there's this conflict that's arisen and nobody's
got experience to do this and all that.
So no specific stories to tell, but, you know, like I would say growing the organization
was harder than growing the community and growing the website, which is interesting.
Well, yeah, it's kind of miraculous and inspiring that a community can emerge and be stable
and that has so much kind of productive, positive output.
It kind of makes you think.
I mean, I don't, it's one of those things you don't want to analyze too much because
I, you don't want wanna mess with a beautiful thing,
but it gives me faith in communities.
Yeah, yeah.
That they can spring up in other domains as well.
Yeah, I think that's exactly right.
And, you know, at Fandom, my for-profit,
WEEK company, where, you know, it's like,
all these communities about pop culture, mainly,
sort of entertainment, gaming and so on.
There's a lot of small communities.
And so I went last year to our community connect conference
and just met some of these people.
And like, you know, here's one of the leaders
of the Star Wars wiki, which is called Wookiepedia,
which I think is great.
And, you know, he's telling me about his community
and all that.
And I'm like, oh, right, yeah, I love this. Like, so it's not, it's not the same purpose as Wikipedia of a neutral
high quality and cyclopedia, but a lot of the same values are there of like, oh, people should
be nice to each other. It's like, when people get upset, it's like, just remember, we're working
on a Star Wars wiki together. Like, there's no reason to get too outraged and
Just kind people just like geeky people with a hobby
Where do you see Wikipedia in 10 years?
100 years and
1000
Right, so 10 years I
would say pretty much the same like we we're not going to become TikTok,
you know, with entertainment,
scroll by video, humor, and blah, blah, blah.
An encyclopedia.
I think in 10 years, we probably will have
a lot more AI supporting tools
like I've talked about,
and probably your search experience
will be, you can ask a question
and get the answer rather than, you know,
from our body of work.
So search and discovery, it would have been improved
to face some of that.
All that.
I always say one of the things that people,
most people won't notice,
because already they don't notice it,
is the growth of Wikipedia in the languages of the
developing world. So you probably don't speak Swahili. So you're probably not checking out that
Swahili Wikipedia is doing very well. And it is doing very well. And I think that kind of growth
is actually super important, it's super interesting. But most people won't notice that. If we can just look on that, if we could, do you think there's so much incredible translation
work is being done with AI with language models?
Do you think that can accelerate what Wikipedia?
So you start with the basic draft of the translation of articles and then you've done that.
So what I used to say is like machine translation
for many years wasn't much used to the community
because it just wasn't good enough.
As it's gotten better, it's tended to be a lot better
in what we might call economically important languages.
That's because the corpus that they train on and all of that.
So to translate from English to Spanish,
if you've tried Google translate
recently Spanish to English is what I would do.
It's pretty good.
I think it's actually not bad.
It used to be half a joke and then for a while
it was kind of like, well, you can get the gist of something.
And now it's like, actually, it's pretty good.
However, we've got a huge Spanish community
who write in native Spanish.
So they're able to use it and they find it useful, but they're writing. But if you try to do English to Zulu, where there's not that much
investment, like there's loads of reasons to invest in English to Spanish because they're both
huge economically important languages. Zulu not so much. So for those smaller languages, it was just
still terrible. My understanding is it's improved dramatically and also because the new methods of training
don't necessarily involve identical corpses to try to match things up, but rather reading
and understanding with tokens and large language models and then reading and understanding
and then you get a much richer. Anyway, apparently it's quite improved, so I think that now it is quite possible that
the smaller language communities are going to say, oh, well, finally, I can put something in
English and I can get out Zulu that I can that I feel comfortable sharing with my community
because it's actually good enough or I can edit a bit here and there. So I think that's huge.
So I do think that's going to happen a lot, and that's going to accelerate, again, what
will remain to most people in an invisible trend, but that's the growth in all these other
languages.
So then move on to 100 years.
I was starting to get scary.
Well, the only thing I say about 100 years is like, we've built the Wikimedia Foundation, and we run it in a quite cautious and financially
conservative and careful way.
So every year we build our reserves, every year we put aside a little bit more money.
We also have the Endowment Fund, which we just passed 100 million.
That's a completely separate fund with a separate board.
So, it's not just a big fat bank account for some future profligates a year to blow through.
The foundation will have to get the approval of a second order board to be able to access that
money. And that board can make other grants through the community and things like that.
So, the point of all that is I hope and believe that we're building, you know,
in a financially stable way that we can weather various storms along the way so that hopefully
we're not taking the kind of risks. And by the way, we're not taking too few risks
either. That's always hard. I think we'll, theimedia Foundation and we'll exist in 100 years. If anybody
exists in 100 years, we'll be there. You think the internet just looks
unpredictably different, just the web. I do. I do. I mean, I think right now, this sort of
enormous step forward we've seen has become public in the last year of the large language models.
enormous step forward we've seen has become public in the last year of the large language models.
Really is something else, right? It's really interesting. And you and I have both talked today about the flaws and the limitations, but still it's as someone who's been around technology for a
long time. It's sort of that feeling of the first time I saw a web browser, the first time I saw
the iPhone, like the first time the internet was like really usable on a phone.
And it's like, wow, that's a step change difference.
There's a few other, you know, maybe a Google search.
I searched, was actually the first search.
Because I remember Alta Vista was kind of cool for a while, then it just got more and
more useless because the algorithm wasn't good.
And it's like, oh, Google search now, like the internet works again.
And so large language model, it feels like that to me.
Like, oh, wow, this is, this is something new and like really pretty remarkable.
And it's going to have some downsides like, you know, the, the negative use case.
I'm, you know, people in the area who are experts, they're, they're giving a lot of warnings.
And I don't know enough to, I'm not that worried, but I'm a pathological optimist.
But I, I do see some like really-hanging fruit bad things that can happen. So my example is
how about some highly customized spam where the email that you receive isn't just like
misspelled words and trying to get through filters, but actually as a targeted email to you that knows something about you by reading your LinkedIn profile and writes
a plausible email that will get through the filters and it's like suddenly, oh, that's a
new problem that's going to be interesting.
Is there just on the Wikipedia editing side, does it make the job of the volunteer of the editor more difficult if in a world
where larger and larger percentage of the internet is written by an LLM?
So, one of my predictions, and we'll see, you know, as Megan in five years how this
panned out, is that in a way, this will strengthen the value and importance of some traditional brands. So if I see a news story
and it's from the Wall Street Journal, from the New York Times, from Fox News, I know what I'm
getting and I trust it to whatever extent I might have trust or distrust in any of those.
trust it to whatever extent I might have trust or distrust in any of those.
And if I see a brand new website that looks plausible,
but I've never heard of it, and it could be machine-generated
content that may be full of errors,
I think I'll be more cautious.
I think I'm more interested.
And we can also talk about this around photographic evidence.
So obviously, there will be scandals where major media
organizations get fooled by fake
photo. However, if I see a photo of the the recent was the the Pope wearing an expensive puffer jacket,
I'm going to go, yeah, that's amazing that a fake like that could be generated, but my immediate
thought is not, oh, so the Pope's dipping into the money, eh? Partly because this particular Pope doesn't seem like he'd be the type.
My favorite is extensive pictures of Joe Biden and Donald Trump hanging out and
having fun together.
Brilliant.
So I think I think people will care about the provenance of a photo.
And if you show me a photo and you say, yeah, this photo is from Fox News, even though
I don't necessarily think that's the highest, but I'm like, wow, it's news organization.
And they're going to have journalists and they're going to make sure the photo is what
it's purports to be. That's very different from a photo randomly circulating on Twitter.
Whereas I say 15 years ago, a photo randomly circulating on Twitter,
in most cases, the worst you could do and this did happen is misrepresent the battlefield.
So like, oh, here's a bunch of injured children.
Look what Israel's done, but actually it wasn't Israel.
It was another case 10 years ago.
That has happened.
That has always been around.
But now we can have much more specifically
constructed plausible looking photos. That if I just see them circulating on Twitter, I'm
going to go, just don't know. Not sure. Like I can make that in five minutes.
So I also hope that it's kind of like what you're writing about in your book that we could
also have citizen journalists that have a stable, very viable trust that builds up.
So it doesn't have to be New York Times with this organization
that you could be in an organization of one,
as long as it's stable and carries through time
and it builds up or so.
No, I agree, but the one thing I've said in the past,
and this just depends on who that person is
and what they're doing, but it's like,
I think my credibility, my general credibility in the world
should be the equal of a New York Times reporter.
So if something happens and I witness it
and I write about it, people are gonna go,
well, Jimmy, well, set it.
That's just like if a New York Times reporter said it,
like I'm gonna tend to think he didn't just make it up.
Truth is, nothing interesting ever happens around me.
I don't go to war zones,
I don't go to big press conferences, I don't interview Putin and
Zelensky, right?
So just to an extent, yes, whereas I do think for other people, those traditional models
of credibility are really, really important.
And then there is this sort of citizen journalism.
I don't know if you think of what you do as journalism,
kind of think it is, but you do interviews.
You do long form interviews.
And I think people, you know, like if you come
and you say, right, here's my tape,
what you wouldn't hand out a tape.
Like I just gestured you as if I'm handing you a cassette tape.
But if you put it into your podcast,
here's my interview with Zelensky and people
aren't going to go, yeah, how do we know that could be a deep fake? Like, you could
have faked that because people are like, well, no, like you're a well-known podcaster
and you do interview interesting people. And yeah, you like, you wouldn't think that. So
that your brand becomes really important. Whereas if suddenly, and I've seen this already, I've seen sort of video with subtitles in English and apparently the Ukrainian was the
same.
And of Zelensky saying something really outrageous.
And I'm like, yeah, don't believe that.
Like I don't think he said that in a meeting with, you know, whatever.
I think that's Russian propaganda or probably just trolls.
Yeah. And then then building platforms and mechanisms of how that trust can be verified.
Yeah.
You know, if something appears in a Wikipedia page, that means something.
If something appears on, like say, my Twitter content means something, they mean it's,
I, this particular human, I've signed off on it.
Yeah. And then the trust you have in this particular human transfers to the
piece of content. And then hopefully there's millions of people with different metrics of trust.
Yeah. And then you could see that there's a certain kind of bias in the set of conversations
you're having. So maybe okay, I trust this person of this kind of bias and I'll go to the
other person of the other kind of bias that I can integrate them in this kind of way. Just like
you said with Fox News and what the rest of the time.
Yeah.
What's the general news?
They've all got there like where they sit.
Yeah.
So you have built, I would say one of the most impactful websites in the history of human
civilization.
So let me ask for you to give advice to young
people how to have impact in this world. High schoolers, college students wanting to have a
big positive impact. Yeah, right. If you want to be successful, do something you're really
passionate about rather than some kind of cold calculation of what can make you the most money.
Because if you go and try to do something and you're like, I'm not that interested, but I'm going to make a lot of money
doing it.
You're probably not going to be that good at it.
And so that is a big piece of it.
I also, like, so for startups, I give this advice.
And this is a career startup.
Any kind of like young person just starting out
is like, you know, be persistent, right?
There will be moments when it's not working out and you can't just give up too easily.
You've got to persist through some hard times, maybe two servers crash on the Sunday and you've
got to sort of scramble to figure it out, but persist through that. And then also be prepared to pivot. That's a newer word, new for me,
but when I pivoted from Newpedia to Wikipedia,
it's like, this isn't working,
I've got to completely change.
So be willing to completely change direction
when something's not working.
Now the problem with these two wonderful pieces of advice
is which situation am I in today, right?
Is this a moment when I need to just power through and persist because I'm going to find a way
to make this work?
Or is this a moment where I need to go, actually, this is totally not working and I need to change
direction?
But also, I think for me, that always gives me a framework of like, okay, here's a problem.
Do we need to change direction or do we need to kind of power through it?
And just knowing
like those are the choices and not always the only choices but those choices.
I think it'd be helpful to say, am I, am I, am I, am I checking it out?
Like, because I'm having a little bump and I'm feeling an emotional and I'm just going
to give up too soon.
Okay.
Ask yourself that question.
And also it's like, am I being payheaded
and trying to do something that actually doesn't make sense?
Okay, ask yourself that question too.
Even though they're contradictory questions,
sometimes it'll be one, sometimes it'll be the other,
and you've got to really think it through.
I think persisting with the business model
behind Wikipedia is such an inspiring story.
Because we live in a capitalist world.
We live in a scary world, I think, for an internet business.
And so, yeah.
And so, like, to do things differently than a lot of websites are doing.
Like, what Wikipedia has lived through this excessive explosion of many websites
that are basically ad-driven.
Google is ad-driven. Facebook, Twitter, all of these websites are ad-driven.
And to see them succeed become these like incredibly rich, powerful companies that if
I could just have that money, you would think as somebody running Wikipedia, I could do
so much positive stuff, right? And so to persist through that is,
I think is from my perspective now, Monday,
Monday, night quarterback, whatever,
is it was the right decision,
but boy, is that a tough decision?
It seemed easy at the time, so.
And then you just kind of stay with it.
Stay with it, it's working.
So now when you chose persistent. Yeah, and then you just kind of stay with it. Stay with it. It's working. So now when
you chose persistent. Yeah. Well, yeah. I mean, I always like to give an example of my space,
because I just think it's an amusing story. So, my space was poised, I would say, to be Facebook.
Right. It was huge. It was viral. It was lots of things, kind of foreshadowed a bit of maybe even
TikTok because it was like a lot of entertainment content, casual.
And then Rupert Murdoch bought it and it collapsed within a few years.
And part of that, I think, was because they were really, really heavy on ads and less heavy
on the customer experience.
So I remember to accept a friend request, was three clicks where you saw three ads and on Facebook
Accept the friend request. You didn't even leave the page. It just like that just accepted
But what is interesting? So I used to give this example of like, yeah, well Rupert Murdoch really screwed that that went up in a sense
Maybe did but somebody said, you know what actually he bought it for and I don't remember the numbers
He bought it for 800 million and it was very profitable through its decline
and he actually made his money back and more so it wasn't like from a financial point of view
it was a bad investment in the sense of you could have been Facebook but on sort of more mundane
metrics it's like actually it worked out okay for it all matters how you define success it does
when that That is also
advice to young people. One of the things I would say, like when we have our
mental models of success, as an entrepreneur, for example, and your
examples in your mind are Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg. So people who at a very
young age had one really great idea that just went straight
to the moon and became one of the richest people in the world. That is really unusual, like really,
really rare. And for most entrepreneurs, that is not a life path you're going to take. You're going to
fail, you're going to reboot, you're going to learn from what you failed at, you're going to try
something different. And that is really important because if you are standard of success is, well, I feel
sad because I'm not as rich as Elon Musk. It's like, well, so should almost everyone,
possibly everyone except Elon Musk is not as rich as Elon Musk. So that, you know, like
realistically, you can set a standard of success, even even in a really analysis, which I don't recommend of thinking about your financial success.
It's like, if you measure your financial success by thinking about billionaires, like, that's
heavy.
Like that's probably not good.
I don't recommend it.
Whereas, like, I personally, you know, like for me, when people, when journalists say, oh, how does it feel to not be a billionaire, I usually say, I don't know it. Whereas, personally, for me, when people, when journalists say,
oh, how does it feel to not be a billionaire, I usually say,
I don't know how does it feel to you, because they're not.
But also, I live in London, the number of bankers that no one's ever heard of,
who live in London, who make far more money than I ever will,
is quite a large number.
And I wouldn't trade my life for theirs at all, right?
Because mine is so interesting.
Like, oh, right.
Jimmy, we need you to go and meet the Chinese propaganda minister.
Oh, okay, that's super interesting.
Like, yeah, Jimmy, you know, like, here's the situation.
Like, you can go to this country and while you're there, the president has asked to see you.
It was like, God, that's super interesting.
Jimmy, you're going to this place
and there's a local Wikipedia who said,
do you wanna stay with me and my family?
And I'm like, yeah, like that's really cool.
Like I would like to do that.
That's really interesting.
I don't think that all the time, but I've done it,
and it's great.
So like for me, that's like arranging your life so that you have interesting experiences.
It's just great.
Well, this is more to the question of what Wikipedia looks like in a thousand years.
What do you think is the meaning of this whole thing?
Why are we here?
Human civilization.
What's the meaning of life?
I don't think there is an external answer to that question.
And I should mention that there is a very good Wikipedia page on the different philosophies
in the meaning of life. Oh, interesting. I have to read that and see what I think.
It's actually neutral and gives a wide range of really good reference to how a lot of different
philosophies about meaning. The 20th century philosophy in general, from Nietzsche to the existentialist, all of them
have an idea of meaning.
They really struggle to systematically rigorously, and that's what the page.
And obviously, a shout out to the Hitchhiker's guide and all that kind of stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, I think there's no external answer to that.
I think it's internal.
I think we decide what meaning we will have in our lives and what we're going to do with
ourselves.
And so when I think, you know, if we're talking about thousand years, millions of years,
Yuri Milner wrote a book.
He's a big internet investor guy. He wrote a book advocating quite strongly for humans exploring the universe and getting off the planet.
And he funds projects to like send like using lasers to send little cameras and interesting stuff.
And he talks a lot in the book about meaning. It's like his thing, his view is that the purpose
of the human species is to broadly survive
and get off the planet.
Well, I don't agree with everything he has to say
because I think that's not a meaning
that can motivate most people in their own lives.
It's like, okay, great.
Like the distance is a space or absolutely
enormous. So I don't know what should we build generationships to start flying places? Well,
that I can't do that. And I'm not even if I could even if I'm Elon Musk and I could devote
all my wealth to build it. I'll be dead on the ship on the way. So is that really meaning?
But I think it's really interesting to think about and reading his little book, it's quite
a short little book, reading his book, it did make me think about, wow, like this is big,
like this is not what you think about in your day-to-day life, is like, where is the human
species going to be in 10 million years?
And it does make you sort of turn back to earth and say, gee, let's not destroy the planet.
We're stuck here for at least a while.
And therefore, we should really think about sustainability.
And I mean, one million year sustainability.
And we don't have all the answer.
We have nothing close to the answers.
I'm actually excited about AI in this regard
While also bracketing. Yeah, I understand there's also risks and people are terrified of AI
But I actually think it is quite interesting this moment in time that we may have in the next 50 years
to really really solve some really
long-term human problems for example in health
I think the progress that's being made in really long-term human problems, for example, in health.
Like the progress that's being made in cancer treatment,
because we are able to, at scale, model molecules
and genetics and things like this, it gets huge.
It's really exciting.
So if we can hang on for a little while,
and certain problems that seem completely intractable
to die like climate change may end up being
actually not that hard.
And we might just might be able to alleviate
the full diversity of human suffering, for sure.
Yeah.
And in so doing help increase the chance
that we can propagate the flame of human consciousness
out into the stars.
And I think another important one, if we fail to do that, for me, is propagating, maintaining
the full diversity, richness, and complexity, and expansiveness of human knowledge.
So if we destroy ourselves,
it would make me feel a little bit okay.
Yeah, you just, if the human knowledge
just trickered me to say something really interesting,
which is when we talked to earlier about translating
and using machines to translate,
we mostly talked about small languages
and translating into English,
but I always like to tell this story of something in consequential really. But there's, I was in
Norway, in Bergen, Norway, where every year they've got this annual festival called Buikor,
which is young groups drumming and they have a drumming competition. It's the 17 sectors of the
city and they've been doing it for a couple hundred years
or whatever.
They wrote about it in the three languages of Norway,
and then from there, it was translated into English
into German, et cetera, et cetera.
And so what I love about that story
is what it reminds me is,
like this machine translation goes both ways.
And like when you talk about the richness and broadness of human culture, we're already seeing some
really great pieces of this.
Korean soap operas, really popular, not with me, but with people.
The ability to imagine taking a very famous, very popular, very well-known Korean drama.
And now, I mean, I literally mean now, we're just about there technologically,
where we use a machine to redub it in English in an automated way, including digitally editing the
faces so it doesn't look dubbed. And so suddenly, you say, oh wow, like here's a piece of, you know,
it's the Korean equivalent of,
maybe it's friends as a comedy
or maybe it's succession just to be very contemporary.
It's something that really impacted a lot of people
and they really loved it
and we have literally no idea what it's about.
Yeah.
And suddenly it's like, wow, you know,
like music, street music from wherever in the world can suddenly become accessible
to us all in new ways.
It's so cool.
It's really exciting to get access to the richness of culture in China, in the many
different subcultures of Africa, South America.
One of my unsuccessful arguments with the Chinese government is by
blocking Wikipedia. You aren't just stopping people in China from reading Chinese
Wikipedia and other language versions of Wikipedia. You're also preventing the
Chinese people from telling their story. So is there a small festival in a small
town in China like Gui Kuo? I don't know, but by the way, the people who live in that village, that small town of
50,000, they can't put that in Wikipedia and get it translated into other places.
They can't share their culture and their knowledge.
And I think for China, this should be a somewhat influential argument because China does
feel misunderstood in the world.
It's like, okay, but there's one way, If you want to help people understand, put it in Wikipedia. That's what people go
to when they want to understand and give the amazing, incredible people of China a voice.
Exactly. Jimmy, I thank you so much. I'm such a huge fan of everything you've done.
Oh, thank you. That's really, yeah. Right. Deeply, deeply, deeply, deeply grateful for what
could be there.
I love it.
It brings me joy.
I donate all the time.
You should donate to.
It's a huge honor to finally talk with you.
It's just amazing.
Thank you so much for today.
Thank you for having me.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Jimmy Wales.
Support this podcast.
We should check out our sponsors in the description.
And now let me leave you with some words from the world historian Daniel Borsthen.
The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance.
It is the illusion of knowledge.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time. that out.