In a world where AI rewrites history, the real question isn’t accuracy—it’s authority.
Yesterday, Elon Musk says Grok 3.5—or maybe Grok 4—will rewrite humanity’s knowledge from scratch. The idea? Fix the errors. Add missing facts. Retrain the model on cleaner data. Because, according to him, the current body of knowledge is flooded with junk.
But Binance founder CZ had a pointed reply:
“Let’s see how that goes. History and opinion aren’t universal. They shift with country, culture, and especially politics.”
And he’s not wrong.
In the AI age, the real question isn’t just how smart the model is. It’s whose truth it’s learning. Every dataset carries bias. Every rewrite has an author. If AI becomes the new librarian of human knowledge, who decides what stays—and what gets deleted?
The battle ahead isn’t only technical. It’s philosophical.
And in that fight, objectivity might be the first casualty.