
GZERO World with Ian Bremmer Why we still trust Wikipedia, with cofounder Jimmy Wales
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Dec 13, 2025 Jimmy Wales, cofounder of Wikipedia and champion of open information, discusses why Wikipedia remains a reliable source amid declining trust in media and government. He attributes this trust to its decentralized model, which describes debates rather than taking sides. However, Wales acknowledges challenges like recent partisanship, particularly in controversial topics like Gaza. They also cover how AI impacts information sharing and how Wikipedia maintains its integrity against manipulation—all while staying committed to transparency and community engagement.
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Decentralization Resists Corruption
- Wikipedia's decentralized, open community makes it harder to corrupt than centralized publications.
- Wales contrasts the ease of corrupting a magazine with the difficulty of corrupting Wikipedia's community.
Don't Flood; Build Credible Participation
- Stop flooding Wikipedia with low-quality or mass-generated edits; the community will block and slow such attempts.
- Engage constructively and build stable pseudonymous reputation rather than blasting edits anonymously.
Describe Debates, Don't Take Sides
- Wikipedia aims to 'describe the debate' rather than take sides on contested issues.
- Wales says the site should avoid speaking in its own voice unless near-unanimous community consensus exists.

