
Brew Markets Trust Issues: Wikipedia’s Founder on Big Tech, Social Media and AI & Are Malls Back?
Dec 5, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia and author of The Seven Rules of Trust, dives into the critical value of trust in our digital age. He warns about the repercussions of broken trust on platforms like X, while exploring the potential for AI in editing Wikipedia—stressing its limitations. Wales contrasts the responsibilities of social media with the integrity of community-driven sources. Plus, he shares insights on the surprising resurgence of mall retail and the implications of flamboyant leadership styles on public trust.
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Trust Breaches Don’t Always Kill Stocks
- Market prices often ignore short-term trust breaches when the core business remains strong.
- Jimmy Wales argues long-term trust violations still harm businesses even if stock recovers short-term.
Give Users Real Moderation Power
- Explore community-driven moderation tools instead of relying solely on top-down processes.
- Give users more control over their environment to reduce chaos and improve trust.
Top-Down Moderation Fails To Scale
- Major platforms still make most moderation decisions top-down, which doesn't scale well.
- Wales believes platforms should experiment more with user control and decentralized moderation.




