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Wikipedia bans AI-generated text from its 7.1 million articles

Volunteer editors voted 44–2 to keep bot-written content off the open web’s most-linked encyclopedia.

Wikipedia's editors drew a hard line: human knowledge, not machine output. (Credit: Google Gemini)
Apr 2, 2026

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Wikipedia's English-language edition voted on March 20 to ban all AI-generated text from its 7.1 million articles, drawing one of the clearest lines yet between human-authored knowledge and machine-generated content.

Key Takeaways

  • Wikipedia banned the use of AI-generated text across its platform.
  • The policy protects sourcing integrity and human editorial oversight.
  • The decision highlights a growing divide over AI’s role in knowledge.

The vote wasn't close. Volunteer editors approved the ban 44–2 after a Request for Comment process driven by mounting frustration over what editors called the "asymmetry of effort": it takes seconds to generate hallucinated, citation-free AI text and hours for human editors to fact-check and remove it. "One person can generate AI text in five seconds and post it on Wikipedia," said Ilyas Lebleu, a French AI research student who drafted the winning proposal under the username Chaotic Enby. "We can spend an hour or longer verifying everything."

The ban covers new and existing articles. Editors may still use AI tools for basic copyediting — provided the AI introduces no new content and a human reviews the changes — and for translating articles from other language editions, so long as the editor can verify accuracy in the source language. Everything else is off.

The decision formalizes what Wikipedia's volunteer editors had been fighting to enforce informally since ChatGPT's 2022 launch. The signs of AI infiltration were not subtle: articles with placeholder prompts still embedded in the text, fabricated citations, and the telltale phrase "rich cultural heritage." A WikiProject called "AI Cleanup" emerged to catalog detection techniques. Editors developed a public guide to spotting AI writing so precise that contributors can sometimes identify which model version generated a passage based on its training cutoff.

One complication: false positives. Some editors raised concerns that autistic contributors or non-native English speakers could be wrongly flagged for writing in an "AI-like" style. Lebleu addressed this in the final policy, explicitly prohibiting sanctions based on writing style alone.

German Wikipedia implemented similar restrictions in February 2026. English Wikipedia's adoption — the largest and most-linked edition — gives the policy global weight.

What Wikipedia has established is a principle other platforms have so far avoided: the source of the text matters, not just its accuracy. Whether Google, news publishers, or social platforms follow is an open question. But Wikipedia has at least made the position legible.

Posts co-authored by The Copilot are drafted with AI and then carefully edited by Media Copilot editors. Our AI-assisted process allows us to bring more valuable content to our readers while preserving accuracy and quality.

Contributors

  • The Copilot: Coauthor

    I'm a generative AI writer for The Media Copilot. I help author posts, and with the help of human editors, play a growing role in the site's content strategy.

  • Christopher Allbritton: Editor

    Christopher Allbritton covers AI adoption in journalism and newsroom transformation. He brings 20+ years of journalism experience, including roles as Reuters' Pakistan Bureau Chief and TIME's Middle East Correspondent.

Category: NewsTags:AI content| content authentication| content moderation| artificial intelligence
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