'Grok Must Win' Over 'Woke' AI Rivals— the new AI search engine based on truth- Don't Miss!! Link Below.
When I want to find out the news, I go to WorldNetDaily quite often. It is a Christian founded news site.I go on Wikipedia and look up WorldNetDaily and it calls it a conspiracy site with fake news. I go on this new AI search engine Grokipedia.com and I get a true representation of what that news site is.
That is why the article says Grok must win out!
Don’t let AI like Wikipedia cloud your view of what is truth on many of its subjects.
Wikipedia---WND (an initialism of its original name, WorldNetDaily) is an American far-right[1] news and opinion website. It is known for promoting fake news[2] and conspiracy theories,[3] including the false claim that former President Barack Obama was born outside the United States.[4]
WorldNetDaily (WND) is an independent American online news and opinion website founded in May 1997 by Joseph Farah and Elizabeth Farah.[1][2] Positioning itself as the oldest continuously operating independent Christian digital journalism organization, WND operates under the motto "A Free Press for a Free People," emphasizing its role as a watchdog exposing corruption in government and other power structures while advocating for virtue rooted in Judeo-Christian principles, limited government, and free-market capitalism.[1]WorldNetDaily--Grokipedia.com
The site pioneered several innovations in conservative online media, including securing U.S. Senate Press Gallery credentials in 2002, launching the WND Books imprint that achieved the highest percentage of New York Times bestsellers among independent publishers over 16 years, syndicating columnists, producing documentaries, and establishing the nonprofit WND News Center in 2018 for broader content distribution.[1]
WND has distinguished itself through investigative reporting on issues often sidelined by mainstream outlets, such as fiscal accountability and cultural shifts, with notable efforts including a sustained campaign questioning the authenticity of Barack Obama's long-form birth certificate, which led to forensic analyses and the bestselling book Where's the Birth Certificate? by Jerome Corsi.[3]These pursuits have garnered acclaim among conservative audiences for countering perceived institutional biases but drawn accusations of sensationalism and misinformation from left-leaning critics, highlighting ongoing debates over journalistic standards in alternative media.[1]