this post was submitted on 15 Jan 2026
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It's also a huge demotivator for people working on a collaborative project when large mega corporations are involved. Not quite 1:1 with fandom which operates for-profit but I can say almost any wiki on fandom is largely edited by anywhere from 0-4 people, and in many cases it is 0 because there is significantly less motivation to contribute to something that isn't a wholly community project and is instead benefitting some corporation.
It will only get worse for wiki from this kind of starting point, more and more will slide in and if it does you'll see a significant drop off in contributors.
I'd wager some contributors are already saying to themselves "I didn't write hundreds of thousands of words for microsoft".
Oh yeah, I'm aware, I was involved with some Fandom wikis too in the past, even back when it was still called "Wikia".
Unfortunately, for many communities there isn't a good alternative, since not many people have the time and resources to host one themselves.
The thing is, if you solve that income-tech barrier then it will change the game. Most communities do want a wiki and will work on one in much higher numbers than fandom gets if they think it's actually there to serve the community instead of make money for someone. So if that "I don't know how" and "I don't have money to host" and "it's scawy!" barrier can be removed you'd see a lot more work go into basically all of them.
Maybe Ibis (federated wiki) actually does have a future!
Wow, that looks like it could also be a version of fandom.com that doesn't suck.
Edit: just realized I skipped the comment from Awoo in the chain you're replying to that mentions fandom.com, lol.