So will Big Tech kick back some of its profits to Wikipedia, a service that has provided them so much free content for years? According to Wikimedia Foundation, the organization is already in talks with these companies and deals may be reached as early as June.Ī more pressing question, however, is how will Wikipedia’s army of volunteers react? The organization has depended on its volunteers to actually create, research, update, moderate, and fact-check its content since the website’s founding. In fact, Wikimedia’s Seitz-Gruwell tells Wired that the free service currently being used by Google and the other Big Tech companies will continue to be available to even those for-profit corporations.
Obviously, Wikipedia will continue to be free for its regular global user base. The paid service provided by Wikimedia Enterprise will help do that work for them and, in turn, bring in a new revenue stream for the nonprofit.
The year Gruwell spoke to TechCrunch, however, the tech outlet pointed out that Amazon had donated nothing.Īccording to the Wikimedia Foundation, these companies currently have employees and, in some cases, entire teams, working on delivering Wikipedia’s content through its own systems. Some of the companies they're looking to charge, like Google, have donated millions of dollars to the organization. In a 2018 interview with TechCrunch, Wikimedia Foundation Chief Revenue Officer Lisa Seitz-Gruwell shared that while Wikipedia’s content is free to use by all, some companies were exploiting the organization by not reciprocating.įor now, Wikimedia Foundation's $100 million budget is funded by donations from users and grant money provided to the Wikimedia Foundation. Wikipedia’s current cost to the multi-billion dollar tech conglomerates? Nothing. YouTube even depends on Wikipedia to fight misinformation on its video platform. Ask Apple’s Siri or Amazon’s Alexa a question and both the virtual assistants will dig into Wikipedia’s archives to spit out an answer for you. Users don’t even have to leave Google’s search engine for their answer. Input a query into Google and the search engine will often provide a snippet from Wikipedia right there on the page.
Wikimedia Enterprise, according to the organization, will provide a commercial product that tailors Wikipedia’s content for publication on services provided by Google, Facebook, Apple, and Amazon - services that millions upon millions of people use every day. In a first for the nonprofit Wikimedia Foundation, Wikimedia Enterprise will offer a paid service targeting Wikipedia’s biggest users: Big Tech companies.
But for companies like Google, Facebook, Apple, and Amazon, Wikipedia is hoping to charge them for publishing its content.Ī new report by Wired looks into a brand new division under the Wikimedia umbrella called Wikimedia Enterprise. However, the nonprofit that runs Wikipedia, the Wikimedia Foundation, hopes that some companies will pay for it.ĭon’t worry, it’ll still likely be free for you, dear Mashable reader. The website bills itself as the “free encyclopedia,” providing knowledge free of charge to a global user base. and the 13th most trafficked site in the world. It’s currently the 8th most visited website in the U.S.