Wikipedia’s Jimmy Wales has been known as the final respectable tech baron. It’s feels like a flattering label, though one I often affiliate extra with yacht-dwelling meatheads who feed their herds of cattle homegrown macadamia nuts; the type of one that can most just lately be discovered wining and dining with the President of the USA and his coterie of MAGA sycophants.
Wales, however, retains issues comparatively low-key. At the same time as the location he based, Wikipedia, turns 25 years previous this month, he appears extra fascinated with fixing his dwelling Wi-Fi than becoming a member of the tech elite’s performative energy video games. He has additionally spent the previous few months selling a brand new guide, The Seven Rules of Trust, that makes use of Wikipedia’s overarching technique and unlikely rise to articulate Wales’ playbook for fixing a lot of what’s damaged in as we speak’s deeply polarized and antagonistic society.
On this week’s episode of The Big Interview, Wales and I mentioned what it means to construct one thing utilized by billions of people who’s not optimized for progress in any respect prices. Throughout our dialogue he mirrored on Wikipedia’s messy, human origins, the methods it’s been focused by governments from Russia to Saudi Arabia, and the challenges of holding the road on neutrality in a web based ecosystem hostile to the notion that info even exist. We additionally talked about what threatens Wikipedia now, from AI to conspiracy-pilled billionaires, and why he’ll by no means edit an entry about Donald Trump. Learn our full dialog under.
This interview has been edited for size and readability.
KATIE DRUMMOND: Jimmy Wales, welcome to The Huge Interview. Thanks a lot for being right here.
JIMMY WALES: Thanks for having me on.
We at all times begin these conversations with a couple of fast questions, like a bit warmup to your mind. Are you prepared?
Sure.
What’s an web rabbit gap you’ve got fallen into most just lately?
House Assistant. I’ve simply began utilizing House Assistant to run sensible dwelling units, and there is a enormous group and hundreds of issues to examine and so forth and so forth. So it is what I am obsessive about.
What is that this group doing?
Troubleshooting. Individuals are engaged on extensions to cope with each type of factor on the planet, and it is wonderful.
What’s a topic you by no means argue about on-line anymore?
I’d say I do not argue with anyone about trans points. There’s completely no level in it. It is too poisonous. I by no means did argue about it, however I do not even discuss it.
You are simply going to remain away.
Yeah, it is too disagreeable.
What do you belief extra: Wikipedia or ChatGPT?
Positively Wikipedia.
I needed to ask. What’s your favourite web site or app that’s not Wikipedia?
I actually do like elements of Reddit. There’s some actually nice communities on Reddit, and nice individuals. I lurk and browse within the private finance subreddit. There’s simply a number of very nice individuals there. I am at all times amazed by it.
Reddit is admittedly having a second. I discover that I spend much more time lurking within the Reddit app on my telephone, as a result of I’d relatively learn considerate conversations than scroll on X.
That is precisely it. It is like a spot with paragraphs.
And sometimes actually considerate individuals. What’s the neatest thing about residing within the UK versus the US?
Properly, my household’s right here. I at all times say this concerning the US: Tech is in Silicon Valley, and politics is in Washington, and flicks and showbiz are in LA, and finance is in New York. However all these issues are in London.
So if I lived in Silicon Valley, I’d solely have tech mates as a result of that is who lives there. Whereas in London, it is far more complete. Every kind of individuals. So I like that.

















































