The encyclosphere is a universal network of encyclopedias[1] that gives an equal voice in expressing knowledge, and in rating those expressions of knowledge. The encyclosphere is not an encyclopedia; rather, it is a network of encyclopedic content. The encyclosphere is to encyclopedias what the blogosphere is to blogs.
The encyclosphere is being brought into existence by the Knowledge Standards Foundation, which will facilitate the creation of the necessary standards. The encyclosphere was invented in response to problems with biased opinions in Wikipedia[2].
. The logo of Encyclosphere of the Knowledge Standards Foundation | |
Screenshot | |
Type of site | Distributed networking |
---|---|
Headquarters | United States |
Owner | Knowledge Standards Foundation |
Created by | |
Website | encyclosphere.org |
Commercial | No |
Launched | October 15, 2020 |
Current status | Active |
As it is planned, the encyclosphere will allow writers and publishers to post feeds of encyclopedia articles (or metadata about articles, and ratings of articles). App developers would be able to collect the data from all of those feeds and use the data to construct massive search engines, and other neat features, for all the encyclopedia articles in the world. No one app would be privileged, but all would tap into—and help build—a “knowledge commons.” Ultimately there would be a massive knowledge competition to best express human knowledge on every topic and from every point of view.
In Dec 2022, the Encyclosphere had the following projects:
Encyclosphere also runs the peer-to-peer (P2P) network based on the Hypercore Protocol. Articles viewed in EncycoReader are sent to this network and can be shared.