“Revising the Narrative: How ‘Grokipedia’ Seeks to Correct Perceived Ideological Biases in India-Related Wikipedia Articles”

In a recent piece by noted economist and author Sanjeev Sanyal — himself a member of the Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister and a longtime commentator on Indian economic and historical narratives— attention is drawn to a new initiative: Grokipedia, launched on 27 October 2025 by xAI, which uses the Grok AI model to generate and revise articles that, according to its proponents, correct perceived ideological biases in existing Wikipedia entries relating to India.

Sanyal highlights 20 specific instances in which Grokipedia’s editors claim to have rewritten sections of Wikipedia-articles, added context, or shifted framing. Their stated aim: to incorporate court verdicts, primary sources, and historical, ideological context so as to reduce what they describe as activist or minority-victim-centric framings, colonial-era scepticism, or downplaying of Hindu or nationalist perspectives.

What is Being Claimed

Among the 20 examples cited:

Why This Matters

Sanyal argues this exercise is important for two reasons. First, he contends that Wikipedia—owing to its volunteer nature, historical Western lens, and activism-driven editing—has in many cases reflected a particular ideological framing of Indian history and society. Grokipedia, by explicitly aiming to correct “selective victim emphasis” and “omission of provocations”, aims to restore what he calls “empirical clarity” and “balanced, non-communal narratives”.

Second, given the role that encyclopaedias and reference works play in public understanding, the stakes are high. If public memory is shaped by certain framings, then academic, policy and societal, idelogical debates are influenced accordingly. By using court verdicts, archival material, and government reports, Grokipedia claims to be shifting the baseline of “accepted fact”.

Criticisms & Caveats

However, this initiative also raises important questions. While Grokipedia presents itself as a corrective, critics might ask: who is deciding what counts as “bias”? And whether the new framing itself introduces a different bias. For example:

Removing emphasis on victims of minority communities might lead to under-recognition of those harms.

Emphasising one side’s narrative (e.g., Hindu claims of a pre-existing temple) as “fact” may conflict with contested scholarly views.

Reliance on state reports, court verdicts or government dossiers might naturally reflect the ruling establishment’s view.

Sanyal’s article acknowledges that there is a tension: between activism-driven framings and historical scepticism, between colonial-era scholarship and nationalist, ideological reinterpretation. But the question remains: can an online encyclopaedia truly secure neutrality when the revision process itself is visible as ideological correction?

Implications for public discourse

The emergence of Grokipedia is noteworthy for several reasons:

In sum, Sanjeev Sanyal’s article presents Grokipedia as a bold intervention: an attempt to revise online knowledge on India by re-framing widely viewed encyclopedia entries and correcting what he labels as ideological distortions. His 20 examples cover many sensitive topics and reflect significant editorial changes—from communal violence to historical figures, religious traditions to geopolitics. Whether Grokipedia will succeed in delivering greater balance, or simply shift the balance of bias, remains to be seen.

What is clear is that the battle over how history and society are represented online has large consequences — not just for academic debates, but for how millions of users will view India’s past and present. In an era of AI-assisted knowledge creation, the guardrails of neutrality, transparency and pluralism become ever more important.

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