Technology

In Jeffrey Epstein's e-mails: Jmail, the web project that allows you to explore files

A new digital tool that organises and makes available Epstein's emails, photos, flights and court documents with a Gmail-like interface.

by Riccardo Saporiti

aggiornato alle 22:30

2' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

2' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

The interface resembles that of Google Mail, the difference being that instead of a G there is a J and that this service allows one to navigate within the correspondence of Jeffrey Epstein.

It is called Jmail the project realised by Kino AI CEO Luke Igel and Riley Walz, a software engineer whom the New York Times called "The tech jester who makes fun of San Francisco".

Loading...

Behind Jmail, however, there is not only a taste for irony. For those familiar with the Google suite, the site looks just like a Gmail mailbox: Epstein's profile picture is at the top right, in the box all the mails that can be consulted but also searched, as one does with one's own e-mail.

For each message opened, there is of course the possibility of downloading the original file. Then there is a section replicating Drive, the storage space, where all documents released by the US Department of Justice are stored.

And a space for the photos, which can also be searched by subject: a function that very quickly makes it possible to view the (many) photos of former president Bill Clinton and the (few) of the current Donald Trump in the Epstein Files.

That's not all: in the JFlights section one can track all the airline flights mentioned in the documents seized from the paedophile financier, in JAmazon the purchases made on Jeff Bezos' platform, on JeffTube the videos, on Jotify an audio version of the interrogations, which however seems more like an artificial intelligence reading of the texts in the archives.

A Jacebook page allows images to be viewed in chronological order, as on Meta's social network, while jMessage shows the message conversations Epstein had, for example, with the ultra-right strategist Steve Bannon.

For those struggling to find their way through this universe of names, there is finally Jwiki, a portal that traces Wikipedia and contains information on all the names mentioned in the files released by the US Department of Justice.

And indeed, the issue of how to succeed in analysing this huge amount of documents is running through the public debate, especially in niches such as those of developers or journalists.

So much so that there are several projects on the net to collect and distribute these documents. Epsteingraph.com is a portal that allows documents to be viewed and downloaded on the basis of a search key, as does the epstein-docs.github.io portal, which also offers a series of summaries of documentation generated by artificial intelligence.

In Italia, the journalist Alberto Puliafito, editor-in-chief of SlowNews and editor of Internazionale's newsletter dedicated to AI, announced that he is building an archive of the Epstein files using Pinpoint, a tool developed by Google for journalists, with the aim of making it public. All attempts to make it possible to read these documents and the secrets they hold.

Copyright reserved ©
Loading...

Brand connect

Loading...

Newsletter

Notizie e approfondimenti sugli avvenimenti politici, economici e finanziari.

Iscriviti