Tech mogul Elon Musk has officially launched Grokipedia, a new AI-powered encyclopedia developed by his artificial intelligence company, xAI, positioning it as a rival to Wikipedia, the world’s most widely used reference website. Described as a “truth-seeking knowledge base,” Grokipedia aims to offer faster, more factual and less “politically biased” information, according to the Tesla CEO.

The platform, which went live on Tuesday, is powered by xAI’s conversational model Grok, already integrated into Musk’s social media platform X. As per a Business Insider report, Grokipedia features more than 8,00,000 entries at launch, far fewer than Wikipedia’s six million in English, but xAI says this is only the beginning.

Musk has hinted that the AI engine will continuously expand and said on X that it is the only 0.1 version of Grokipedia. He highlighted, “Version 1.0 will be 10X better, but even at 0.1 it’s better than Wikipedia imo.”

 

Open-source vs AI-based algorithm

Where Wikipedia functions on crowdsourced knowledge, Grokipedia is built on automation. Wikipedia’s articles are written and maintained by a global volunteer community operating under clear editorial policies and open discussion forums. Grokipedia, in contrast, uses AI to generate and edit most of its content, with limited visible human intervention.

Musk argues that this approach will “cut through bias and bureaucracy” by allowing AI to focus purely on verifiable facts. He has accused Wikipedia of harbouring “ideological narratives” and claims Grokipedia will provide a more objective alternative.

However, The Verge noted that a number of Grokipedia articles appear to be heavily derived from Wikipedia content, sometimes reproducing paragraphs almost verbatim.

Limitations

Wikipedia, operated by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation, remains one of the most respected and transparent sources of knowledge on the internet. Its open, community-driven model enables millions of contributors to collaborate, discuss, and refine information continuously. While not without limitations, such as occasional inaccuracies, editorial bias, or uneven coverage, Wikipedia’s long availability has earned it lasting acceptability.

Where Wikipedia functions on crowdsourced knowledge, Grokipedia is built on automation.
Where Wikipedia functions on crowdsourced knowledge, Grokipedia is built on automation.

Grokipedia, by contrast, represents a different approach: a top-down, AI-guided model that emphasises efficiency and automated synthesis over community participation. Its future success will depend on how effectively xAI balances accuracy, transparency, and ethical standards as the platform develops.

At this stage, Grokipedia is an evolving experiment and an exploration of whether artificial intelligence can complement, or perhaps one day rival, the collective expertise of human editors.