this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2025
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If you don't check their name - Darwin - on Wikipedia, where do you check it? A random AI? When you're on Facebook, their AI? When you're on Reddit, their AI? How trustworthy are they? What does that mean for general user behavior in the short and long term?
When you're satisfied with a soccer match score from a headline, fair enough. Which headline do you refer to, though? Who provides it? Who ensures it is correct?
Wikipedia is an established and good source for many things.
The point is that people get their information elsewhere now. Where it may be incomplete, wrong, or maliciously misrepresenting or lying. Where discovering more related information is even further away. Instead of the next paragraph or a scroll or index nav list jump away, no hyperlink, no information.
Personally, I regularly explore and verify sources.
I doubt most of those visits to Wikipedia were as shallow as finding just one name or term. Maybe one piece of information. Which may already go deeper than shallow term finding, and cross references and notes may spark interests or relevant concerns.
You have a lot of good points and I may have missed the intent of the article, but a knee jerk reaction of "lower traffic = AI is bad" is not helpful either. My point is that I frequently find myself hitting a page just to check a reference, quote or remember something. AI search results can be useful here. It's no different than how DuckDugkGo has a sidebar if the results are from StackOverflow. It's nice to get quick answers. I would like to see a fair solution to the content creators being able to stay in business.
I think that you did not understand OC correctly…
What OC is talking about, is that the person searching for the lost word is verification enough. Meaning as soon as the word is seen, the remember is triggered to where the searching person knows the information already.