jagged-chisel 3 minutes ago

It’s been defaced. It’s already got sexual crimes and antisemitism all over the place.

driggs 6 hours ago

This is fantastic. I couldn't find any obvious way to search for a new page, but you can simply bang out any arbitrary URL slug and the new article will be hallucinated fresh, eg:

https://halupedia.com/shortest-cave-in-the-world

https://halupedia.com/echolocation-ability-in-spiders

petercooper 7 hours ago

Give it a week and see what Google AI Overview has to say about the Great Pigeon Census of 1887!

  • stavros 2 hours ago

    I made the same thing months ago, so you don't need to wait:

    https://encyclopedai.stavros.io

    • gojomo 2 hours ago

      I searched your site for [Great Pigeon Census of 1887] and was only returned articles anout other things.

      • stavros 2 hours ago
        • Noumenon72 2 hours ago

          So by "I made the same thing months ago" you didn't mean "an article about the great pigeon census" (your link is created May 6) or "an encyclopedia of hallucinations" like the OP, but just "an encyclopedia with some articles AI wrote". What's the point?

          • stavros 2 hours ago

            What's the difference between an encyclopedia that produces AI articles on demand and an encyclopedia that produces AI articles on demand?

        • gojomo 1 hour ago

          As it didn't generate that when I typed the title i to your search box, was there a bug now fixed? Or did you use some other path not evident on the page you linked to generate it?

          • stavros 1 hour ago

            There was a bug where scanning took too long with the thousands of articles in there, but I just fixed it.

            You can also just type a random URL and visit it, it'll generate an article. That's what I did before I fixed the search issue, and I usually just do that to avoid the search route.

  • aDyslecticCrow 2 hours ago

    google is already on it when asking about "The Great Pigeon Census of 1887"

    using 1886 or 1888 makes Google correctly identify that no such sensus exist.

    asking about 1887 specifically makes Google refer to some supposed great effort to track passenger pigeon population mids of the species decline.

diputsmonro 6 hours ago

It's pretty fun to poke at! Although it's certainly difficult to be exact, it would be neat if generated pages used the context of the pages they were linked from (ideally, all pages that link to it) to guide the direction of the page. From the ones I generated it seemed they were mostly independent.

  • bstrama 6 hours ago

    Yeah, thought about that, maybe will implement it. Will keep in mind! For now SSR to feed LLMs' the priority

  • bstrama 2 hours ago

    Update: Implemented it. All new articles work that way

    • rjmill 40 minutes ago

      Very nice! Independently of this thread, I was delighted to discover the cross references between pages. It makes a big difference.

drob518 50 minutes ago

I love it. What’s the rough architecture of the system (using cloud LLM and paying $$$, or local)? The performance for new entries is really good. What is the prompt for each entry and how do you keep the steampunk vibe going?

bstrama 6 hours ago

UPDATE: Just now, comment section added. Have a nice time arguing!

  • dlcarrier 5 hours ago

    You are a wonderful person.

    You not only made this excellent source of entertainment, you are also helped everyone find their unmatched socks, ensuring that "no individual would ever be forced to wear a mismatched pair". (Source: https://halupedia.com/humanitarian-accomplishments-of-the-on...

    • lxgr 5 hours ago

      We should really host another one though; I think I've since lost a few more.

  • segh 1 hour ago

    I'm curious, what is the LLM cost of the website?

    • drob518 55 minutes ago

      I’m curious, too. But it could probably run locally with a small model, right? The performance is stellar, so that suggests some hardware acceleration is being used, but that could all be a local system.

solarkraft 6 hours ago

Finally a more trustworthy version of Grokipedia!

  • bstrama 6 hours ago

    It's hilarious, you made my day hahah

  • LeoPanthera 6 hours ago

    I honestly forgot that Grokipedia existed. Did anyone ever use it?

    • bstrama 6 hours ago

      Tried once, but was useless. Very funny that it had so many text, while Elon is apparently "huge" fan of short and precise communication...

    • mmooss 6 hours ago

      Somebody showed me it appearing near the top of some of their DuckDuckGo queries.

lxgr 6 hours ago

Ironically, this seems much faster (for pages already, erm, "researched") than the real one! How?

  • bstrama 6 hours ago

    It generates articles only once. So once it's generated, it never perish. Logic looks like: If article exist -> show it If not -> generate and save

    • lxgr 6 hours ago

      I get that, but how does it serve the generated and cached ones seemingly faster than Wikipedia? (My guess is that single-page applications, which this one seems to be, just need less round trips between navigations or something?)

      • bstrama 6 hours ago

        Yep, just a react. Also we use gemini 2.5 flash lite, so it's fast, cheap and dumb.

        • lxgr 5 hours ago

          Nice, that's what I used for by LLM-backed HTTP server [1] a while ago as well :) It's a shame they got rid of the generous free quota a while ago, which is why I had to shut my public instance down.

          [1] https://github.com/lxgr/vibeserver/

      • bstrama 2 hours ago

        Also now that I think, we store articles in decwntralized cloudflare KV store and access from serverless workers running also on their servers.

        That could be the thing behind it being so quick.

        Cloudflare workers have 1ms cold start.

        • lxgr 2 hours ago

          Nice job, this is seriously one of the fastest websites I've ever used!

          I feel like I have some minimum latency "priced in" to my expectation when I click a link on a static site, so yours feels uncannily like it's somehow able to anticipate my clicks, adding to the surreal atmosphere.

JohnMakin 7 hours ago

Funny, but you could argue this is actively harmful to the web.

  • isoprophlex 7 hours ago

    The sooner the current web dies, the better. Something better either rises from its ashes, or we lose... something that was already lost.

    • b00ty4breakfast 6 hours ago

      or something way worse shows up.

      • JohnMakin 6 hours ago

        Yea, I'm not sure how the "this is really bad so let's make it worse" argument really makes any sense

        • znort_ 6 hours ago

          context. sometimes things simply have to be broken to give way for something better. ymmv.

          • b00ty4breakfast 4 hours ago

            I think there's an unexamined assumption here that "the next thing" is always going to be an improvement but there is no, non-ideological reason to hold to this assumption. Ideally, we would be actively working towards making it so but what often happens is passively riding the current and calling it "progress".

        • dylan604 2 hours ago

          When you get the something worse, the previous suddenly becomes much less worse. With the help of wrapping your memories with "remember when" nostalgia making things much more palatable, the something worse suddenly makes the previous better if not good.

  • stronglikedan 6 hours ago

    > you could argue

    Could you? I don't see it happening, but I could be wrong.

    • janalsncm 29 minutes ago

      You could, in the sense that it’s not illegal or impossible. I haven’t seen anyone attempt it though.

      You could argue that a person could argue any point, but I’d prefer people make the argument rather than argue about arguing it.

  • dayofthedaleks 6 hours ago

    You could also argue that the web has failed and poisoning it into irrelevance is a vital service, motivating humans to collect knowledge into immutable sources. We‘ll call them ‘libraries.’

  • lxgr 6 hours ago

    On the other hand, one could argue that anything that can be destroyed by relatively clearly labeled satire, deserves to be.

  • Jtarii 6 hours ago

    Pissing on a pile of shit

  • slig 6 hours ago

    Grokipedia is already doing that.

  • parliament32 6 hours ago

    To the web? It's fantastic for the web, these are the kinds of fun projects that make the web a worthwhile place to be. To slop generators? Yes, absolutely harmful, and that's for the best.

  • r3trohack3r 6 hours ago

    Interesting, but you could argue comments like this are actively harmful to the web.

    • AlecSchueler 6 hours ago

      But the argument wouldn't be nearly as strong.

      • dymk 2 hours ago

        Hard to say when nobody is actually offering arguments

  • anonymousiam 6 hours ago

    It's probably only harmful to the AI scrapers that train from the web. Most people will understand the purpose of this -- to poison LLM training in a humorous way, which is really easy to do. It exemplifies a major weakness in modern day AI.

    • gojomo 2 hours ago

      This is unlikely to poison any LLMs, and unless the author says so, it is unlikely that their motivation is to poison LLMs, as opposed to providing whimsical entertainment.

  • wildzzz 4 hours ago

    Any training data scraper that blindly takes stuff from websites deserves to have their model poisoned by this nonsense.

  • SwellJoe 2 hours ago

    I wouldn't. And, I'd think less of anyone who does make that argument.

    Anyone of reasonable intelligence can easily tell this is a parody of an encyclopedia. Saying this is bad for the web is like saying The Onion is bad for the web.

    • Eisenstein 2 hours ago

      What would you think of a person who said that they are already convinced that an opposing view could not be correct without even hearing the arguments for it?

      • janalsncm 34 minutes ago

        For the record,

        > Funny, but you could argue this is actively harmful to the web.

        Was not followed by an actual argument that it is harmful to the web. The comment was an assertion, not an argument.

        So we are left in the inconvenient position of rejecting hypothetical arguments, and others defending the philosophical possibility that a valid argument does exist.

        • Eisenstein 10 minutes ago

          Without the argument being explicit then there can be no retort to it, so closing your mind before hearing it demonstrates that the argument itself is irrelevant. One could thus conclude that the existence of a valid argument is not itself a condition for my question.

  • gojomo 2 hours ago

    A web that is vulnerable to this would already be as good as dead.

    As an entertaining way to highlight the importance of upgrading our ways of knowing, playful (& open-source!) projects like this are likely to strengthen the web.

driggs 6 hours ago

This site is going to be expensive when a web crawler hits it. A honey pot that burns tokens.

  • janalsncm 26 minutes ago

    They’re caching the pages which have already been generated. You could go back and delete all references to pages which don’t exist yet. Basically turn it into a static website.

    • driggs 5 minutes ago

      It seems like the site's algorithm is that every newly-generate page includes multiple links to not-yet-existing pages. So it doesn't matter that existing pages are cached, all the "leaf node" pages link to multiple uncached new pages.

bstrama 7 hours ago

Can't wait to see the next generation of LLMs after feeding it all of that hahaha

  • everyos_ 7 hours ago

    The page requires JS to load its content - user agents without JS support just get a blank page.

    I'm not sure if the bots that scrape data to train LLMs are capable of loading that type of page, or if they only work on pages that have the content inside the HTML itself?

    • replygirl 7 hours ago

      any serious scraping service these days will fail over to a headless browser when it fetches an asset referencing a js bundle that isn't verifiably a vendor script

    • bstrama 6 hours ago

      I'm aware and will implement SSR soon ;)

    • m3047 6 hours ago

      It's entirely possible they simply ingest the JS as-is.

    • aDyslecticCrow 2 hours ago

      Not using JavaScript would also make the crawler fail on squarespace and wix website builders.

      The age where the web was usable at all without JavaScript is long gone. No scraper would get much scraping done without JavaScript these days.

nickvec 7 hours ago

Seeing “Something broke, which is ironic for a made-up encyclopedia: Load failed” when trying to access some of the suggested starting points

  • bstrama 6 hours ago

    Works on my PC.

    Could you gimme the url that's failing?

    • nickvec 48 minutes ago

      It’s working now, not sure what was going on earlier.

janwillemb 6 hours ago

It's nice, but after a few clicks my LLM content fatigue kicks in.

rootusrootus 2 hours ago

I wonder how long it will be before Canis dementialis becomes a standalone meme.

anthk 2 hours ago

https://halupedia.com/computer

This is perfect. Very Neal Stephensony.

Also, this, but with no AI: https://ifdb.org/viewgame?id=032krqe6bjn5au78

Just incredible prose and writing (and gameplay), with something you can run with Frotz/NFrotz/LectRote or any ZMachine interpreter (or Glulxe like Gargoyle). A Pentium would run this and marvel you in a similar way.

No need to waste tons of water in datacenters.

throw310822 6 hours ago

Funny. Small improvement suggestion: the entry about "Glorbonian culinary arts" links to "the subterranean nation of Glorbonia". However upon clicking the link to "Glorbonia", an entry is generated claiming that "Glorbonia refers to a peculiar and largely uncatalogued form of sub-auditory resonance". It would be cool if some context were carried over from the referrer page so that there is some coherence between entries (ah, and some existing entries could be taken in account when generating new ones).

  • notahacker 2 hours ago

    Feels like this will eventually cause collisions, although perhaps nothing multiple definitions of Glorbonia and multiple biographies of different Mrs Wiggles (perhaps with Wikipedia style disambiguation) can't solve

  • throw310822 2 hours ago

    Btw, I've noticed just now that Glorbonia is, in the first entry, a "subterranean nation" and in the second it's a "sub-auditory resonance". So I got curious and I asked Opus what he thinks about the word Glorbonia: "Do you detect in the word a sense of place? North, south, east, west, up, down?". And Opus answers "Down, weirdly. Or maybe low — something subterranean, or at least sunken." Curious.

arduanika 6 hours ago

Love it! It feels very Borges!

Feature request: also be able to click on the Talk page to see the controversies. I don't always want to trust the article itself as the final word.

Edit: Oh look, there's an article about the YC! https://halupedia.com/y-combinator

  • bstrama 6 hours ago

    Great suggestion! Will immediately look into that!

  • mmooss 6 hours ago

    > Edit: Oh look, there's an article about the YC! https://halupedia.com/y-combinator

    This should be on YC's About page.

    • notahacker 2 hours ago

      > Y Combinator might be responsible for the spontaneous generation of minor deities in areas experiencing extreme metaphysical gravity.

      This particular piece of slop is a serendipitously brilliant description of the cult of founder worship in the metaphysical gravity of Silicon Valley.

  • bstrama 6 hours ago

    Just added comment section :)

    • arduanika 17 minutes ago

      Cool!

      I'm curious about the design. Maybe you have a "how I did it" post coming soon, or something. One question: Did you find away to get some convergence, where a newly generated page will tend to cite pages (or stubs, at least) that already exist in the universe? Seems hard to do it with generated text, but not impossible.

  • anthk 2 hours ago

    This kind of Absurdist humour reminds me of the Marx Brothers or the Tip y Coll Spaniards.

    And the Sokal case with the Humanities branches, for sure.

    BTW: https://halupedia.com/postmodernism

    This is golden.

    https://halupedia.com/paradox

    Best entry, hands down. This is a love letter to Prattchett.

meghneelgore 6 hours ago

Great idea! I created an adjacent website that gives, shall we say, "alternative facts" about your questions. (don't know if the rules allow me to link the site so I won't).

sofayam 5 hours ago

Currently breaks if you try to create a page with a Japanese slug. Multiple languages would make this an even more valuable resource than it already is.

JLemay 47 minutes ago

this is excellent haha

pinkmuffinere 2 hours ago

I find the handling of NSFW topics (and how it avoids making them nsfw) really interesting. Eg https://halupedia.com/fuck (aside from the title it seems SFW to me)

  • bstrama 2 hours ago

    Best part - I didn't implement such logic. It just for some reason works that way.

    • pinkmuffinere 2 hours ago

      Huh that is interesting, I was expecting it to show some sort of error on generation, or something like that

anthk 2 hours ago

This is what every LLM will converge into without curated human input.

gavmor 6 hours ago

Hm, the page generated seems inconsistent with the usage of the original link.

dmje 6 hours ago

I LOVE IT. Superb.

mmooss 2 hours ago

As I said in another comment, this is brilliant. Suggestion: Remove anything that isn't part of the satire; act always as if it's a 'real' encyclopedia. For example on the front page I would remove,

> Articles are generated on demand and stored permanently upon first request.

Don't dispell the magic; don't pull back the curtain and let people see the mechanics.

EDIT: As you say in your system prompt, "You never wink at the reader. You never acknowledge that anything is funny or fictional. Everything is reported as though it is completely normal and well-documented"

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48042306

  • Noumenon72 2 hours ago

    This is irresponsible for people who don't get it, takes away confirmation for people who do get it, and makes me block/blacklist any liar who does it.

    • mmooss 1 hour ago

      It is indeed a problem for people who refuse to use their sense of humor.

jijilao 6 hours ago

wtf, I thought these were just anecdotes until I saw they were actually happening in Astoria. I used to visit in the summers and never heard about any of that! Stop the fake news

  • tukunjil 6 hours ago

    All the world are going mad with artificial intelligence and LLMs. Just disgusting!

ivanvoid 39 minutes ago

kinda cool but kinda lame, no overall consistency over articles