Elon Musk’s Grokipedia is here, hoping you’ll ditch Wikipedia

    By Varun Mirchandani
Published October 28, 2025

What’s happened? As shared by Elon Musk on X, Grokipedia has officially launched under xAI, arriving as version 0.1 in October 2025. Musk positions it as an ambitious competitor to Wikipedia, aiming to correct what he sees as editorial bias and slow crowdsourced editing. The platform opened with roughly 885,000 articles and encountered initial bugs, yet was declared by Musk as a “massive improvement” over the original.

Why this is important: Encyclopedias are no longer just reference books. Instead, they also feed AI models, shape search results, and influence public understanding. Grokipedia’s arrival signals that who controls knowledge matters just as much as the knowledge itself.

Why should I care? Grokipedia could change where your quick facts come from, not just on the site itself, but anywhere Grok’s summaries surface. You see, Wikipedia remains a heavily used, human-edited reference with citations and public revision histories. Grokipedia, by contrast, leans on AI-generated entries that are less transparent than Wikipedia around sourcing and editorial decisions, but faster to produce.

Additionally, Elon Musk says Grokipedia is fully open source, meaning anyone can use it for free and build on top of it. Editing entries is also quite simple: just highlight the text, tap “It’s Wrong”, and submit a correction.

Okay, so what’s next? Grokipedia is launching in Version 0.1, and even Elon Musk says Version 1.0 will be “10x better.” That leaves a lot of room for growth, especially around sourcing transparency, verification, and moderation. Right now, the platform’s biggest challenge isn’t generating articles quickly, but convincing people they can trust AI-written reference content without obvious citations or talk-page equivalents.

Over the coming months, key areas to watch include how xAI tackles accuracy disputes, handles bias, and integrates new media formats or deeper ties into Grok search. Features like visible sources, optional expert review, or Wikipedia-style revision logs could help reduce hallucinations and build confidence. Musk’s promise is ambitious, though if Grokipedia can balance speed of response with reliability of content while it scales, it could become a valuable resource for a new audience.

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