How does a free, decentralized, volunteer-run encyclopedia produce something more trusted than nearly any for-profit institution?
How does a free, decentralized, volunteer-run encyclopedia produce something more trusted than nearly any for-profit institution?
Luigi Zingales and Bethany McLean sit down with Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales to explore how the platform organizes global knowledge.
The conversation unpacks how Wikipedia governs itself without a central authority, why consensus beats voting, and what the deliberate vagueness of its rules actually protects against.
But is artificial intelligence a looming threat to this system? Wales questions whether these new technologies can actually verify truth without the human feedback loops that correct traditional platforms.
Can the community-driven approach of Wikipedia teach the broader business world how to survive an era of deep digital skepticism? Tune in to discover if spontaneous human order is truly the ultimate defense against an automated future.
Connect with us:
📺 Subscribe to our YouTube Channel
📱 Follow Capitalisn’t on Instagram & TikTok
✉️ Email your questions and comments to capitalisntpod@gmail.com
Enjoying the show? Please leave us a rating and review on your favorite podcast player! Make sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode.