I have recently launched Wikifreedia, which is a different take on how Wikipedia-style systems can work.
Yes, it's built on nostr, but that's not the most interesting part.
The fascinating aspect is that there is no "official" entry on any topic. Anyone can create or edit any entry and build their own take about what they care about.
Think the entry about Mao is missing something? Go ahead and edit it, you don't need to ask for permission from anyone.
Stuart Bowman put it best on a #SovEng hike:
> The path to truth is in the integration of opposites.
Since launching Wikifreedia, less than a week ago, quite a few people asked me if it would be possible to import ALL of wikipedia into it.
Yes. Yes it would.
I initially started looking into it to make it happen as I am often quick to jump into action.
But, after thinking about it, *I am not convinced importing all of Wikipedia is the way to go*.
The magical thing about building an encyclopedia with no canonical entry on any topic is that each individual can bring to light the part they are interested the most about a certain topic, it can be dozens or hundreds, or perhaps more, entries that focus on the edges of a topic.
Whereas, Wikipedia, in their Quijotean approach to truth, have focused on the impossible path of seeking neutrality.
Humans can't be neutral, we have biases.
Show me an unbiased human and I'll show you a lifeless human.
*Biases are good*. Having an opinion is good. Seeking neutrality is seeking to devoid our views and opinions of humanity.
Importing Wikipedia would mean importing a massive amount of colorless trivia, a few interesting tidbits, but, more important than anything, a vast amount of watered-down useless information.
All edges of the truth having been neutered by a democratic process that searches for a single truth via consensus.
# "What's the worst that could happen?"
Sure, importing wikipedia would simply be *one* more entry on each topic.
Yes.
But culture has incredibly strong momentum.
And if the culture that develops in this type of media is that of exclusively watered-down comfortable truths, then some magic could be lost.
If people who are passionate or have a unique perspective about a topic feel like the "right approach" is to use the wikipedia-based article then I would see this as an extremely negative action.
### An alternative
An idea we discussed on the #SovEng hike was, what if the wikipedia entry is processed by different "AI agents" with different perspectives.
Perhaps instead of blankly importing the "Napoleon" article, an LLM trained to behave as a 1850s russian peasant could be asked to write a wiki about Napoleon. And then an agent tried to behave like Margaret Thatcher could write one.
Etc, etc.
Embrace the chaos. Embrace the bias.