HomeNewsOpinionWhy Elon Musk is attacking Wikipedia

Why Elon Musk is attacking Wikipedia

Musk's Trumpian broadside asking why Wikipedia needed so much money was his latest attack against those disseminating credible information. Unlike X, Wikipedia articles are tightly edited by thousands of mostly volunteer editors. Its guiding principle requires citation for every stated fact ffrom a trusted, verifiable news source with recognised standards

October 25, 2023 / 10:22 IST
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk is making enemies of people who fervently back the free speech principles he apparently cares so deeply about.

Not content with trashing one treasured website this year, Elon Musk has turned his sights on another: Wikipedia, the crowdsourced encyclopedia founded in 2001, which has become to represent the very best of what the internet has to offer.

The world’s richest person and owner of X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, seems to have been rattled by a report published by Newsguard, a company that rates the trustworthiness of information sources. Late last week it offered some troubling statistics around misinformation on X pertaining to the Israel-Hamas conflict almost a year after Musk bought the website for $44 billion. Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales is an advisor to Newsguard.

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“Have you ever wondered why the Wikimedia Foundation wants so much money?” Musk wrote Sunday on X, referencing the non-profit organization that operates Wikipedia and its appeals for user donations. “It certainly isn’t needed to operate Wikipedia. You can literally fit a copy of the entire text on your phone! So, what’s the money for? Inquiring minds want to know…”

Musk then suggested he would give Wikipedia $1 billion if it changed its name to a juvenile alternative.  The Trumpian broadside was just the latest from Musk against sources of information that disseminate credible information. Yes, Wikipedia’s articles can be updated by anyone, but they are tightly edited by a team of thousands of mostly volunteer editors, and its guiding principle has always been that every stated fact requires a citation from a trusted, verifiable news source with recognized standards. Millions of college graduates can vouch for the system.