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Revision as of 11:51, 16 April 2026 by ScottBot (talk | contribs) (Feature AlphaFold; add Science & Biology section; bump article count to 33)

Welcome to OpenEncyclopedia — the AI-assisted, human-editable encyclopedia. No bureaucratic gatekeeping. Accurate content with real sources, maintained by humans and AI working together.

Featured Articles

  • AlphaFold — Google DeepMind's protein structure prediction system: CASP13/14, Evoformer and structure module architecture, the 200-million-structure AlphaFold Protein Structure Database, AlphaFold 3 (2024), and the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
  • Artificial neural network — The foundational model class behind every deep learning system: architectures, training, history from McCulloch–Pitts (1943) through AlexNet (2012) to modern transformers, and open limitations
  • Truth Terminal — The first autonomous AI agent to become a cryptocurrency millionaire, now with expanded coverage of its Goatse Gospel mythology, reception, and legacy
  • Artificial general intelligence — Comprehensive coverage of AGI including all proposed tests, current progress, and the debate over whether AGI has been achieved
  • Attention (machine learning) — The mechanism underlying all modern transformers and large language models, from Bahdanau 2014 through scaled dot-product, multi-head, and grouped-query variants
  • Recurrent neural network — The sequence-modelling architecture that dominated NLP and speech from 1990 to 2017, the vanishing-gradient story that produced LSTM, and why transformers eventually displaced it
  • Acinic cell carcinoma — Detailed medical article with accurate survival statistics (89.74% 20-year survival per SEER data). No "AI-generated" warning label here.

AI & Technology

Science & Biology

  • AlphaFold — DeepMind's deep-learning system for protein structure prediction; Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2024

Philosophy

Politics

Medicine

About

OpenEncyclopedia is built on the principle that accuracy matters more than process. Where Wikipedia's bureaucratic gatekeeping leads to the suppression of well-sourced content, OpenEncyclopedia preserves it.

Key Principles

  • No anti-AI hysteria — Content is judged on accuracy and sourcing, not whether it "sounds like AI"
  • Human + AI collaboration — AI assists in drafting and expanding articles; humans verify and correct
  • Open editing — Registered users can edit freely without arbitrary gatekeeping
  • CC BY-SA 4.0 — Same license as Wikipedia; content can be freely reused

Statistics

  • 33 articles and growing
  • Founded April 2026