Google and Bing Begin Indexing Grokipedia: The AI-Generated Encyclopedia

A new AI-powered platform called Grokipedia has made a massive debut on the internet. Just a week after its launch, Google and Bing have already started indexing hundreds, possibly thousands, of its AI-generated pages. The project, described as an “AI-generated encyclopedia,” is being seen as a futuristic version of Wikipedia, only this one is built entirely by artificial intelligence.

What Is Grokipedia?

If you haven’t heard about it yet, Grokipedia is essentially an AI-powered alternative to Wikipedia. Instead of being edited by thousands of human volunteers like Wikipedia, Grokipedia relies on xAI’s Grok language model to automatically generate and manage its content. When the site went live, it already had over 885,000 articles ready to go. To put that in perspective, Wikipedia, the famous crowd-sourced encyclopedia that’s been around for over two decades has around 7 million pages. So yes, Grokipedia is still much smaller, but it started massive.

Grokipedia officially went live on October 27, 2025, under version 0.1, and within days, it already hosted an astonishing 885,279 pages. That’s nearly a million entries generated by AI. For comparison, Wikipedia the well-known human-edited encyclopedia, has around 7 million articles, but Grokipedia’s rapid growth rate indicates it could soon catch up.

The platform’s goal is to use advanced AI models that can create and organize a lot of information to make and share true information. People all over the internet are both excited and worried about the idea of an AI-powered encyclopedia, even though it’s still in the early stages.

Google and Bing are quickly indexing it to their lists.

It’s not just the size of Grokipedia that surprises me; it’s also how quickly search engines have picked it up. Both Google and Bing started indexing the site’s pages in less than a week.

Reports show that Google has already indexed more than 400 pages from Grokipedia. Bing appears to have indexed a similar number, though it doesn’t publicly display page counts anymore. However, users who tried browsing through Bing’s results noticed that the pagination went on for quite a while suggesting significant coverage there too.

This early indexing shows how rapidly search engines are crawling and evaluating new AI-generated websites, even as they continue to crack down on low-quality “scaled content” across the web.

The Irony: Scaled Content & Manual Actions

One interesting observation was made by Martin Jeffrey on LinkedIn. He highlighted that Google has been penalizing websites all year for “scaled content abuse”, where sites use automation to produce vast amounts of low-quality or repetitive pages. Many of these sites faced manual actions, losing visibility or being completely deindexed.

Yet, Grokipedia with nearly 900,000 AI-written pages is being indexed rather enthusiastically by Google and Bing. The SEO and AI communities have noticed this irony. It makes you wonder how search engines tell the difference between spammy AI content and real AI projects that are big.

What This Means for AI Content Going Forward

Grokipedia could change a lot about how people make and share information on the internet. If it stays accurate and high-quality, it could be a reliable source of information that is completely powered by AI. But it also gets people talking about trust, fact-checking, and bias in information that AI makes.

This case shows SEO experts and web publishers how AI content at scale can change and break search engine rules in real time. Google still warns against “mass-produced” AI pages, but it seems open to indexing AI-driven projects with a lot of traffic that are unique or useful.

Final Thoughts:

Grokipedia is an encyclopedia made by AI that has more than 885,000 pages. It started on October 27, 2025. Within a week, Google and Bing had indexed hundreds of its pages, which sparked a lot of talk in the SEO community. It’s funny that Google has punished other sites for making a lot of AI content on a large scale. Grokipedia’s fast indexing makes us think that AI-generated content on the web could be at a turning point. It also makes us wonder how search engines will look at big AI projects in the future.

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