The online world has deeply changed the rules of information: a few selected systems have emerged as centralisers, providing simplified access. On the one side, search engines compress the number of pages to interact with, and on the other side Wikipedia tries to compress information itself. These systems have had an enormous success, but success also brings problems. In the case of Wikipedia, these problems are due to its distributed nature: everybody can contribute and so also manipulate information in a way that is practically invisible to the general public. We describe the Negapedia system, an online public service providing a more complete picture of this underlying layer. We explain the challenges and choices that had to be m...