From information gaps to global access — how AI is reshaping the pursuit of knowledge.
Updated
November 28, 2025 4:18 PM
.jpg)
Paper cut-outs of robots sitting on a pile of books. PHOTO: FREEPIK
Encyclopaedias have always been mirrors of their time — from heavy leather-bound volumes in the 19th century to Wikipedia’s community-edited pages online. But as the world’s information multiplies faster than humans can catalogue it, even open platforms struggle to keep pace. Enter Botipedia, a new project from INSEAD, The Business School for the World, that reimagines how knowledge can be created, verified and shared using artificial intelligence.
At its core, Botipedia is powered by proprietary AI that automates the process of writing encyclopaedia entries. Instead of relying on volunteers or editors, it uses a system called Dynamic Multi-method Generation (DMG) — a method that combines hundreds of algorithms and curated datasets to produce high-quality, verifiable content. This AI doesn’t just summarise what already exists; it synthesises information from archives, satellite feeds and data libraries to generate original text grounded in facts.
What makes this innovation significant is the gap it fills in global access to knowledge. While Wikipedia hosts roughly 64 million English-language entries, languages like Swahili have fewer than 40,000 articles — leaving most of the world’s population outside the circle of easily available online information. Botipedia aims to close that gap by generating over 400 billion entries across 100 languages, ensuring that no subject, event or region is overlooked.
"We are creating Botipedia to provide everyone with equal access to information, with no language left behind", says Phil Parker, INSEAD Chaired Professor of Management Science, creator of Botipedia and holder of one of the pioneering patents in the field of generative AI. "We focus on content grounded in data and sources with full provenance, allowing the user to see as many perspectives as possible, as opposed to one potentially biased source".
Unlike many generative AI tools that depend on large language models (LLMs), Botipedia adapts its methods based on the type of content. For instance, weather data is generated using geo-spatial techniques to cover every possible coordinate on Earth. This targeted, multi-method approach helps boost both the accuracy and reliability of what it produces — key challenges in today’s AI-driven content landscape.
Additionally, the innovation is also energy-efficient. Its DMG system operates at a fraction of the processing power required by GPU-heavy models like ChatGPT, making it a sustainable alternative for large-scale content generation.
By combining AI precision, linguistic inclusivity and academic credibility, Botipedia positions itself as more than a digital library — it’s a step toward universal, unbiased access to verified knowledge.
"Botipedia is one of many initiatives of the Human and Machine Intelligence Institute (HUMII) that we are establishing at INSEAD", says Lily Fang, Dean of Research and Innovation at INSEAD. "It is a practical application that builds on INSEAD-linked IP to help people make better decisions with knowledge powered by technology. We want technologies that enhance the quality and meaning of our work and life, to retain human agency and value in the age of intelligence".
By harnessing AI to bridge gaps of language, geography and credibility, Botipedia points to a future where access to knowledge is no longer a privilege, but a shared global resource.
Keep Reading
Grab your popcorn—2026 is going to be a huge year for sci-fi fans. Big stories are hitting the big screen, from survival epics on a ruined Earth to time-bending adventures and eerie tales of AI love gone wrong. Some are fresh takes, others are long-awaited sequels, but all promise to keep you talking long after the credits roll. Here are five sci-fi movies you’ll want to mark on your calendar.

Release Date: January 9, 2026
Director: Kate Dolan
Stars: Lily Sullivan, David Rysdahl and Claudia Doumit
Soulm8te will take you to a dark AI universe. The film follows a grieving man who turns to an AI android to ease the pain of losing his wife. At first, the relationship feels like a second chance at love, but the bond soon spirals into a dangerous romance.
Noting how companion-style robots already exist in parts of the world, Wan and executive producer Allison Williams wanted to reimagine technology in the form of a female humanoid built for intimacy. Wan, who also directed M3GAN 2.0, another chilling story centered on an AI doll, brings that same unsettling vision to Soulm8te. Ultimately, what begins as comfort soon twists into obsession, turning desire into a deadly consequence.
.jpg)
Release Date: January 9, 2026
Director: Ric Roman Waugh,
Stars: Morena Baccarin, Amber Rose Revah, Sophie Thompson, Trond Fausa Aurvåg
Back in 2020, Greenland introduced audiences to John Garrity (Gerard Butler), a father racing against time to save his family as fragments of a comet threatened to wipe out life on Earth. The story ended with humanity’s last hope lying in survival bunkers deep in Greenland.
The sequel, Greenland: Migration, picks up several years later as the Garrity family emerges from shelter into a devastated world. Now set in post-apocalyptic Europe, John must lead his family across a dangerous wasteland in search of a new home. With survival once again at stake, the journey promises both peril and resilience.

Release Date: March 20, 2026
Director: Phil Lord & Chris Miller
Stars: Ryan Gosling, Milana Vayntrub, Sandra Hüller
Andy Weir’s sci-fi novel Project Hail Mary (from the author of The Martian) is headed to the big screen, with Ryan Gosling starring as Ryland Grace. Once a junior high science teacher, Grace wakes up inside a spaceship with no memory of who he is or why he’s there. He’s been in a coma for nearly four years, kept alive by advanced robotic arms that fed and rotated his body. Slowly, he recalls the truth: this is a suicide mission, with no fuel or food to bring him back home.
Turns out, his path to space began when Eva Stratt, head of a global task force, recruited him after reading his paper on alien survival without water. Now Grace must stop a deadly infestation of star-eating microbes called “astrophage” before they wipe out life on Earth.