Show HN: Jmail – Google Suite for Epstein files

(jmail.world)

1216 points | by lukeigel 20 hours ago

70 comments

  • muzani 18 hours ago
    I'm impressed. You guys cloned a whole suite of products in a short period of time that cost millions of dollars. Even the little bits of humor look costly.

    On the other hand, it's way more information than I expected. I can see why someone would hesitate to release them - there's a lot to sift through and it's likely even the government couldn't sift through all of them to make sure their friends weren't mentioned somewhere.

    • huntertwo 6 hours ago
      > I can see why someone would hesitate to release them - there's a lot to sift through and it's likely even the government couldn't sift through all of them to make sure their friends weren't mentioned somewhere.

      Jared kushner, is that you?

      • elif 30 minutes ago
        Thinking Gmail costs "millions to develop" sounds exactly like the kind of price unawareness that comes from that family.

        I would bet the Gmail team has single employee salaries in that range.

        • stanfordkid 20 minutes ago
          To be fair, millions could be hundreds of millions.
    • lukeigel 18 hours ago
      Thanks! And it's a lot of info, yeah. ~90% of new data in yesterday's drop was photographs, which they redacted for us.

      The House Oversight Committee's giant drop in November had tons of data we still didn't take advantage of even after doing the original Jmail, like flight logs.

      For the Yahoo release, which is still ongoing, the folks at Drop Site News (see https://www.jmail.world/about) are handling the manual redaction which has been very time consuming, even with tons of AI to help in the background.

      • dvrp 18 hours ago
        Would be nice to explain at some point how we did the structuring of the destructured data.

        For now we’re focusing on fixing the bugs because we’re already seeing an insane wave of traffic so most of us are focused on keeping the site alive.

        • nsomaru 3 hours ago
          Hey, I’d be interested in your thoughts on this, or the key ideas/research results you relied on:
      • genghisjahn 3 hours ago
        But, whoever’s doing the redacting sees the original right? What prevents the redactor from saying, “here’s what the document really said.” Or “here’s who’s in the image, I saw it before I redacted it?”
        • freedomben 2 hours ago
          The idea of spending the rest of their life in prison is what stops them
        • mcintyre1994 2 hours ago
          I’d guess a first pass is done automatically? Eg if a page mentions eg Trump, just redact that whole page/paragraph/etc. So the people who have done the closer reading to redact further probably don’t actually know the scale of what was already redacted. Just a guess though.
        • sigwinch 2 hours ago
          Part of the law mandates that all redactions will be listed for Congress within 15 days.
        • immibis 2 hours ago
          People who they think will do this don't get to be redactors. It's all about power and relationships, not technology.
        • chiefalchemist 2 hours ago
          That’s a good point. I would imagine they break it up into pieces - in a reCAPTCHA sorta way - and any given person sees a sentence or a piece of a sentence.

          An alternative would be to strip out all obvious known words and only leave unknowns (i.e., names) and then have those fragments reviewed (in a reCAPTCHA sorta way).

          Finally, for images, cover all faces and the one by one decide which should remain covered and which should not.

          LOTS of work but there are workflows to mitigate the ability for reviewers to connect more than they should.

      • defrost 17 hours ago
        One interesting thread to pull is "Stuff released and then Yanked back" ...

        Images removed from Epstein files less than a day after being posted - https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-12-21/images-removed-from-e...

        promises all the sleuthing excitement of chasing the significance of Donald in a Drawer.

        • wahnfrieden 16 hours ago
          Images were also planted to falsely suggest incriminating evidence.
          • bryanrasmussen 14 hours ago
            while true, it would probably be useful to provide examples. The one that I am aware of seems to be a picture showing Clinton, Michael Jackson, and Diana Ross with "redacted" victims

            https://www.imdb.com/news/ni65628031/

            https://bsky.app/profile/meidastouch.com/post/3mag7myutmc2d

            however it seems that this photo is actually taken from a 2003 Democratic fundraiser, and the redacted images of victims were of Diana Ross' son Evan, and Michael Jackson's kids, Paris and Prince Jackson. This may or may not be accurate either, since I have not been able to dig down into the photo and determine if it has any connections to a supposed 2003 fundraiser.

            But it seems more likely to be true than not that this was sloppily planted evidence that was especially insultingly fake.

            on edit: looking closer does not seem to be exact same photos, but instead two different photos taken at the same time and place, so in the 2003 Dem fundraising, but a different photo of that. So it could be that Epstein had it and DOJ thought hey, look at these pervs! Let's release!!

            • pohl 1 hour ago
              Is it possible that one is an input photo and the other is generative AI output?
            • Arn_Thor 10 hours ago
              As you say, it's not the same photo. If the one in the dump was in Epstein's possession, the reason for the redactions are either that some drone in the DOJ just redacted all children out of habit, or that it was deliberately done in such a way as to frame Clinton. I can't decide which I find more credible.
              • bryanrasmussen 10 hours ago
                I think if it hadn't been those adults with the kids an alert staffer might have thought "whose kids are these, these aren't young teenage girls, I better double check" But Michael Jackson, kids, Clinton arms around him, Diana Ross with young male, they're thinking they walked into an armory filled with nothing but smoking guns!
              • gruez 3 hours ago
                >the reason for the redactions are either that some drone in the DOJ just redacted all children out of habit, or that it was deliberately done in such a way as to frame Clinton

                They were supposed to redact all minors, not just "victims".

              • dontlaugh 4 hours ago
                There’s no need to frame Clinton, there is plenty of evidence he was friends with and spent a lot of time with Epstein.

                Similarly situation with Trump, for that matter.

                • brookst 2 hours ago
                  It is perfectly possible, even common, to frame the guilty. It’s easier than finding real evidence.
                  • dontlaugh 1 hour ago
                    Sure, but in this case there already is plenty of real evidence.
          • wahnfrieden 15 hours ago
            I see people are not clued into this and incredulously downvote because the file release appears to be in good faith to them such that illegal evidence tampering is out of the question

            See https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46341688

            • zahlman 13 hours ago
              The post you link to is deleted.
        • gazabbqparty 5 hours ago
          [flagged]
      • alex1138 14 hours ago
        I'm being snarky and this isn't such a serious comment and I don't really mean this for Gemini but can you imagine using something like Gemini ("Hi, please comb through this") and it just refuses on ethical grounds
        • lukeigel 8 hours ago
          We found that Codex indeed refuses but Claude + Gemini are willing to RAG it
          • muzani 4 hours ago
            Usually Claude is the prude. Personally I haven't even tried for fear what I'd find. I can stomach homicide and war pictures, but Epstein is too much.
            • alex1138 2 hours ago
              I just have real institutional problems with Google, they have all the best tech minds but some things are just off limits to them being politically correct

              And no, not Epstein. It's a general statement; but it's disappointing that they're like this (and of course Gemini was famously the one that gave black Nazis and things like that)

    • Alex3917 17 hours ago
      > You guys cloned a whole suite of products in a short period of time that cost millions of dollars.

      At the risk of stating the obvious, the functionality isn't actually cloned, only the UI. The actual code powering Gmail probably dates back to the late 80s or early 90s and has had several hundred thousands of hours of work put into it. This is just a webpage that looks kind of similar.

      I point this out only because I've seen people saying that software businesses don't have moats anymore because of this, which is taking away a completely false lesson.

      • nntwozz 13 hours ago
        Why stop there, I'm sure you can trace Gmail all the way back to the Roman aqueducts.
        • ithkuil 8 hours ago
          The Link Between a Horse's Arse and the Space Shuttle • Physics Forums https://share.google/UnmMwwQv9kyksKhkI
          • freedomben 2 hours ago
            I'm not a physicist, but after getting into the rotten fruit this fall, I would bet my friend's horse could launch a space shuttle from her arse. Such a sweet mare, but she has no hesitation blasting Venetian atmosphere right into your face while you're scraping the shit out of her feet. At least she has the decency to make eye contact while doing it
          • ThePowerOfFuet 7 hours ago
        • AntiqueFig 8 hours ago
          I mean technically if we didn't have Roman aqueducts, would we have Gmail today?
          • bregma 5 hours ago
            All right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, the fresh water system, public health, and GMail what have the Romans ever done for us?
            • DonHopkins 4 hours ago
              All right, but apart from Google Wave, Google Reader, Google+, Inbox, Stadia, Project Ara, Google Glass, Loon, Picasa, Orkut, Hangouts, Allo, Duo, Google Domains, Google Health, Google Notebook, iGoogle, Knol, Jaiku, Daydream VR, Google Play Music, Nexus, Fusion Tables, Bump, Revolv, Songza, QuickOffice, Meebo, Panoramio, Milk, Schemer, Sparrow, Poly, Tilt Brush, Tour Builder, URL Shortener, Latitude, Spaces, Google Hire, Google Bulletin, Shoelace, and Neighbourly, Android Things, Project Tango, Ara Module Marketplace, Google TV, Nexus Q, Google Play Newsstand, Google Play Movies & TV, Google Podcasts, Google Now, Google Now Launcher, Google Goggles, Gesture Search, MyTracks, Google Play Edition, Android Auto for Phone Screens, All Access, Google Currents, Google SMS Search, Google Cloud Messaging, Android Beam, Androidify, Field Trip, Google Currents, and Google Play Artist Hub, what has Google ever done for us?
        • Alex3917 4 hours ago
          I mean the I would really only include the code for things like:

          - Fetching email messages

          - Parsing email headers

          - Mime parsing

          - Converting the text of email bodies into UTF-8

          - Threading messages

          - Eliding reply text

          Given that the official story is that pb made the first version of Gmail in a day, does anyone actually believe that he wrote the code for any of those things in a day? If you honestly believe that I have a bridge to sell you.

          Wait till you learn that the source code in Chrome also predates the existence of Google.

        • DonHopkins 4 hours ago
          At least to the Black Death.
      • bryanrasmussen 15 hours ago
        I mean it is so obvious causing me to find the use of the phrase cloned so weird that I feel it needs to be said.

        The UI cloning doesn't feel exactly correct either there are things that are slightly off.

        But I just find the "cloned" wrong, because obviously you cannot send an email from this account, you cannot log in to the service as Jeffrey Epstein, you cannot delete emails, create alerts based on searches, do actions on selected emails (create new tag, move under that tag)

        there are so many functionalities that are not cloned because obviously they could not be cloned because they would make no sense for what this project is. So just the praise for cloning so quickly makes me sort of mad.

        You could theoretically make something like this that allowed log in so you got a personalized epstein mails, and then could do all that, and perhaps get more mails sent in as files get released, and perhaps create Google alerts on epstein in the news etc. that would come as mails and maybe the code could put news that came in, into the appropriate the tags etc.

        But until that time "cloned" is just very wrong.

        • DonHopkins 4 hours ago
          For the holidays, they should at least implement a Shockingly Distasteful Jeffrey Epstein Christmas Card Meme Generator.
      • a-dub 14 hours ago
        > The actual code powering Gmail probably dates back to the late 80s or early 90s and has had several hundred thousands of hours of work put into it.

        no. google did not exist until the late 90s.

        various forms of internet email sure did, but most popular mtas of the google era shared very little code with predecessors from the 80s and early 90s (maybe sendmail) and google almost certainly wrote their own from scratch.

        but your first point. that an archive browser that looks like gmail is not equivalent to a full tilt email service backend is valid.

      • jonathanstrange 17 hours ago
        Out of curiosity, would you explain what you mean by that? Google was founded in 1998 and writing a mail client isn't terribly complicated. Did they buy some code for Gmail from an older company? Is Gmail older than Google?
        • wordpad 16 hours ago
          A full featured mailed client is insanely complicated. If you think mail client is just smtp, you probably think word is just text with some styling and excel is just some cells and functions.
          • appreciatorBus 16 hours ago
            I’m sure, buried somewhere deep in Google systems, are vestiges of mail server code originally written in the 80s. But when people use the name Gmail, they are generally referring to the client facing web app, which does not have any such code.
          • dboreham 15 hours ago
            Even "just smtp" isn't trivial.
            • pshirshov 5 hours ago
              It is, or was at least. At the age of 13, I've created one for Windows. It was relatively widely used at the time.
        • Alex3917 4 hours ago
          > Did they buy some code for Gmail from an older company?

          They bought both Deja and Neotonic.

        • randall 17 hours ago
          it is not. gmail is 100% from paul bucheit.
          • Alex3917 14 hours ago
            He wasn't sitting there writing binary code and implementing all 7 layers of the OSI stack by hand, he was was gluing together pre-existing components. And the pre-existing components he had access to include two major email startups acquired by Google in 2001 and 2003, which were founded in 1995 and 1997 respectively. (Although he does have at least two patents for features and algorithms he co-invented while making Gmail.)
            • estebank 3 hours ago
              If I invite you to a barbeque and tell you I made lunch, will you tell me off because I didn't raise and butcher the cow?
        • esseph 16 hours ago
          Gmail is not just a mail client.
          • ape4 15 hours ago
            The spam checker alone is an ton of work. It needs to handle millions of mails for millions of users a day.
            • sgjohnson 13 hours ago
              Nitpick: pretty sure both of those are in the billions.

              Mails could even be in the trillions.

      • 113 17 hours ago
        I don't know if I'm just misremembering but it feels like over the last three years or so the technical knowledge on HN has gone down the toilet.
        • zahlman 13 hours ago
          Could it instead be that less technically inclined people feel more empowered to hang out here?
          • g947o 4 hours ago
            "less technically inclined" doesn't mean people can make whatever incorrect claims unchecked like on reddit, where you get banned because you post inconvenient facts in the wrong sub.

            And this is exactly why I stopped participating in discussions on reddit and never on LinkedIn. Discussions on HN are so much civil and respectful here

            P.S. if the top level comment was indeed posted by a "less technically inclined" person, I hope this is a humbling, positive educational experience, at least that's how I would take it

          • DrewADesign 13 hours ago
            Maybe that and manipulating technical tools requires far less background knowledge than it did, meaning the definition of “technically inclined” has shifted, as it often does.
        • sheepscreek 15 hours ago
          Most *nix tools have their origins in the ‘70s-80s.

          Email as a technology is ancient by today’s standards. SMTP protocol got established in 1982. Even sendmail dates as far back as the ‘70s.

        • inquirerGeneral 14 hours ago
          It's Reddit type conversation often
      • malloc2048 16 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • MarcelOlsz 16 hours ago
          >I decided to get the Max 20x plan, and prompting 4 projects with each 2 to 3 running 'conversations' , never hit the limit anymore.

          Can you expand on this please? Really cool btw.

    • amelius 2 hours ago
      > I'm impressed. You guys cloned a whole suite of products in a short period of time that cost millions of dollars. Even the little bits of humor look costly.

      The cynic in me would assume that someone with a lot of money wants to hide some of the emails and the best way to do that (at this point) is to release them filtered with a great UI.

      • brookst 2 hours ago
        That’s not cynicism, it’s conspiracy theorism. That leads you to “the whole Epstein thing is a hoax designed to distract from what’s really going on”.
        • amelius 1 hour ago
          No, because the hypothesis is relatively easily falsifiable. This does not hold for conspiracy theories.
          • wizzwizz4 1 hour ago
            Would you like to do the work of falsifying it? (Since you made the claim, and posted it online, I'd argue you have some responsibility to do so.)
    • qoez 4 hours ago
      Well there's only 2500 emails here. They definitely had time to sift through these to make sure friends weren't mentioned.
      • parpfish 3 hours ago
        Regardless, it seems like they used the Ctrl-a key to speed up redacting
    • the_arun 2 hours ago
      They also have “promotions” tab listing all promo content. I wonder is this real or mock data.
    • Bender 2 hours ago
      there's a lot to sift through

      The total archive size is 300GB. AFAIK they have only released around 2GB. Curious what is in the rest of it assuming it does not get [redacted] out or deleted. I am also curious how they intend to release the rest of it in time to meet the requirements of the act. Discussion [1] Epstein Files bill sponsor Ro Khanna and Hassan, no dogs being zapped.

      [1] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KT2u0Fp3hQg [video][1hr12m]

    • johnys 17 hours ago
      Yeah, there’s a ton of information. https://epsteinsecrets.com/network is another tool to pursue the data dumps.
    • tonyhart7 11 hours ago
      "whole suite of products in a short period of time that cost millions of dollars."

      but they just copy the "UI" not the whole product

    • TechDebtDevin 16 hours ago
      [flagged]
    • wayeq 12 hours ago
      > - there's a lot to sift through and it's likely even the government couldn't sift through all of them to make sure their friends weren't mentioned somewhere.

      if only there were some kind of universal summary engine that never gets tired and is essentially free.

    • JKCalhoun 14 hours ago
      "…there's a lot to sift through…"

      A job for an LLM…

  • sans_souse 11 hours ago
    Anyone reading thru these and filtering out the promotion spam should consider taking a look thru. All his Amazon orders, which mostly are uninteresting sure, but scattered in there are books and eBook purchases dealing with some relevant and interesting-in-context topics.

    Also, interesting that this one got by him (unopened, unread, filtered from inbox) and the timing of it being near his final arrest (coincidence, but still) https://www.jmail.world/eml/0b80588f551f3d097695f1c9507b6572

    • johnisgood 7 hours ago
      https://www.jmail.world/thread/94b742a9202b9782dcfef7d2aaed1... and this https://www.jmail.world/thread/3a2c95682ec730d0062d6d1c5bcf5.... Why did he order these, for who?

      He sure bought a lot of books. I found this that is not a book.

      • ricardo81 3 hours ago
        >for who

        Indeed. Though the high school uniform thing seems to be a fairly mainstream fetish, with hormones raging at that time in people's lives. But granted, if it's not for your partner or (of age) mistress...

      • alkyon 6 hours ago
        Not surprisingly Lolita was one of them:

        https://www.jmail.world/search?q=lolita

    • dvrp 10 hours ago
      We're also working to have a RAG system on Jemini so you can talk to the files. many of the files have been embedded into vectors thru turbopuffer.
      • koakuma-chan 9 hours ago
        RAG doesn't have to be vectors. You can also make a regular full text search and it's gonna be RAG.
      • yakkomajuri 3 hours ago
        Will do a shameless plug here of Skald: https://www.useskald.com/

        You'll get the whole RAG/context layer going in an hour. Can self-host too if you prefer.

        This is really impressive btw!

    • konradb 7 hours ago
      A little while ago Bloomberg published a list of his books. I created two lists on Goodreads containing these books, using Bloomberg as a source.

      2007 -> 2017:

      https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/237057.Epstein_s_Library...

      2018 -> 2019:

      https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/237060.Epstein_s_Library...

      You can only add 100 books in a Goodreads list so I had to create two. In the lists I linked back to the original Bloomberg article.

      • markus_zhang 3 hours ago
        Looks like he didn't order any CS books. Maybe someone should recommend some to him /s
    • GuB-42 5 hours ago
      Most of the Amazon orders look mundane, mostly books, what is weird is the quantity. It looks like it is all impulse purchases, and I guess that most of these will end up in the trash once it arrives, if it isn't picked up by someone else first.

      I would have thought an quasi-billionaire like Epstein would have a personal concierge do the purchases for him. I certainly would if I was that rich. I would certainly not buy a shower head, I would show my concierge a picture of the shower I want and have him appoint a plumber so that I can have my shower the way I want it when I come back the next day. What's the point of being rich if that's to buy shower heads on Amazon?

      • randerson 3 hours ago
        Plenty of wealthy people are bad at delegating. The part that amazed me is him buying the cheap unpronounceable Amazon brands for medical equipment, like "DEDAKJ Oxygen Concentrator 2-9L/min Adjustable Portable Oxygen Machine for Home and Travel Use". I would've thought a billionaire would be surrounded by the best name brands in everything.

        He also seemed bad at delegating his interior decorating to a professional, judging by the photos of his island.

      • dmos62 5 hours ago
        His assistant may have used his account to place the order.
  • wilgertvelinga 10 hours ago
    Never trust anyone with a network setup like this... https://www.jmail.world/photos?photo=EFTA00002627-0
    • doublerabbit 15 minutes ago
      Probably goes with this six monitor setup.

      https://assets.getkino.com/photos/EFTA00000016-0

    • KellyCriterion 8 hours ago
      good catch! :-)
    • grepfru_it 4 hours ago
      I’ve seen that room before. I found it during an image search. Either this image you are sharing is not really epsteins or the image I found predated the catch of epsteins misdeeds. Or it’s AI/manipulation all the way down. Not sure what to think anymore
      • roryirvine 1 hour ago
        I mean, it links to the source: https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%201/EFTA000026...

        It looks pretty anonymous to me - a completely normal shoddy comms rack from the early-mid 2000s. The only real distinguishing feature is the fibre splice/breakout work taped to a bit of plywood at a funny angle, but even that's not so very out of the ordinary.

        Perhaps you're confusing it with any of a hundred thousand pictures of similar setups from that era?

      • gruez 3 hours ago
        >I’ve seen that room before. I found it during an image search.

        Source?

  • InMice 15 hours ago
    You added icons and functionality to go to the beginning or end of search/inbox - Something that gmail just has never budged on having and always annoyed me! One of the first things I noticed. I must not be alone on this lol
    • lukeigel 8 hours ago
      Thank you! The night before launching the original Jmail we had this hunch that jump-straight-to-end and "random page" would make the site work for people.
  • dash2 14 hours ago
    Even just setting aside the criminal/salacious side... it is just so interesting to see the connections between the elite. Steve Bannon photographed chilling with Noam Chomsky, such a surprise. God, and Robert Trivers is in there too, eeh.
    • unreal6 13 hours ago
      Bannon for a while was deeply ingrained in Hollywood. He still earns residuals on episodes of Seinfeld [0], and owns the film rights to Michael Lewis' Liars Poker (even supposedly writing a screenplay for it himself) [1].

      [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Bannon#Media_and_investi...

      [1] https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/movies/articles/steve-ba...

      • sigwinch 2 hours ago
        He was very close to Epstein. So far as I know, the only mention of Bannon at Turning Point USA was a call to release the 12-15 hours of taped media training he gave Epstein in 2019.
    • el3ctron 3 hours ago
      correct me please if i am missing something, but i read that Chomsky messages and looks like normal conversations, i mean, surely Epstein offered dark services for some guest, but not for all. Even that conversations looks very smart. Social media people moves in majority cases on morbid assumptions. Correct me please if i am missing something, but Chomsky is a great guy, an one of the greatest minds on earth.
  • hn-acct 3 hours ago
    Why does this site work better on mobile than the real google suite. Funny stuff
  • dvrp 20 hours ago
    I participated on this project, but I'm not the main contributor. In fact, I'm working on running an ML model to get some nice gaussian splat visualizations of some of the relevant images based on the recent release by Apple's model: SHARP. It allows doing inference of a PLY point-cloud based on a single JPG image.

    Hopefully I can merge some UI for it soon, but I'm away from my main computer right now.

    EDIT: I'm going to text my friend Luke to comment and answer any questions about the project.

    EDIT2: I am also happy to expand on the technical details of the project once I get a stable internet connection.

    • Retr0id 16 hours ago
      What benefit do you get from the splat-ification? Surely any relevant details are visible in the original jpegs?
    • lukeigel 20 hours ago
      Yes, thanks Diego! Really excited about this.

      I'm one of the co-creators of Jmail alongside Riley Walz. We launched a Gmail-like view of Epstein's inbox last month. It got millions of page views, tons of really amazing requests to collaborate on making more related data accessible, and even new Yahoo emails that no one else has allowed the public to see.

      Yesterday's DOJ drop resulted in this very spontaneous rag-tag team of friends coming to my place in SF and each making their own app in the "Jmail" Suite. Riley and I are pretty shocked by how versatile this parody style is for visualizing Epstein's 20 year digital footprint.

      It's been a ton of fun and we're working hard to polish each view here.

      • throwawayhippa 18 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • noman-land 17 hours ago
          Of course the perpetrators of child abuse would be adjacent to child abuse material. That's why the material needs to be indexed, to make sense of it and round up the rest of the perpetrators.
          • dvrp 17 hours ago
            correct

            i can say that 90% of the work was in making sense of the data, indexing, processing, etc

        • jibal 17 hours ago
          Police and prosecutors have such a great time cataloguing criminals' activities--let's imply that they love crime.
        • GlumWoodpecker 18 hours ago
          Way to miss the point entirely.
  • dabluecaboose 14 hours ago
    Hey OP, just FYI "in lieu of" means "instead of".

    You probably meant to use "in light of"

    • OJFord 7 hours ago
      In the absence of
  • wiether 10 hours ago
    As someone from the other side of the pond, I have to ask: what do people expect from all of this?

    It feels like this is a big smoke screen used by the current admin, first to be reelected, and now to distract people from what they are actually doing (like repeating they decreased drugs price by 600%, that they ended dozens of wars while dropping bombs daily all around the World...).

    It also looks like it allows everyone to peek in other's people lives, which feels quite disturbing. Sure, some of them were/are terrible people. But there's also the victims here. Furthermore, is it how justice should work? Share everything to the world, and let everyone make their own judgement based on what they see?

    Is there going to be some actual outcome? Both for the victims and for their offenders?

    Or is it just a show where everyone can see them as detective/judge?

    Just to add a bit more context: after years of trials, one of our former President finally went to jail for a few weeks. And now, they're invited by media all over the country so they can complain about how unfair it was, they published a book about it, sold in the tens of thousands, their son is the new TV's favorite...

    So I'm wondering: is it actual justice at work, or just a distraction while nothing change and nobody is actually held accountable?

    • huntertwo 6 hours ago
      They are being forced to release the files by a new law passed by congress. This is malicious compliance and they’re not actually releasing what they’re supposed to be releasing.

      Rich people are hiding their crimes against children with corruption. This law seeks to reveal this corruption. Why is that wrong?

      • ptoo 6 hours ago
        Exactly.

        >Share everything to the world, and let everyone make their own judgement based on what they see?

        What's the alternative to this? They don't share all the information with the world and we're expected to believe their evaluation of the evidence?

        • jonp888 5 hours ago
          There's the police and the criminal justice system for that.

          I suggest you post your e-mail login details and here and a dump of the contents of your phone, then all of HN can all check through and see what crimes you're guilty of.

          I'm sure you'll say you haven't committed any crimes, but why should we be expected to believe you if you don't share all your information with the world?

          • sorokod 57 minutes ago
            > There's the police and the criminal justice system for that.

            Well yes, however there was an orchestrated effort to convince people that the system is not working. That effort was successful enough to generate public interest we observe now. Beyond morbid curiosity, there is a belief that the exposure may force the system to do now what it was supposed to do in the first place

          • Zigurd 3 hours ago
            This is all supposedly Epstein's property. Dead people have a very short list of rights or things that resemble rights that belong to their estate. Privacy and protection from slander aren't among those rights. You could argue that digging him up and gratuitously posting pictures of a postmortem would violate the right to dignity for corporeal remains. But apart from that, if you emailed Jeffrey, he has no power to keep that correspondence private.
          • huntertwo 5 hours ago
            When you sue someone, you can subpoena for evidence. Any evidence from that presented to the court is then public record. The police and criminal justice system doesn’t usually enforce privacy like that in criminal proceedings.

            Are you trying to say that these documents shouldn’t be public because it violates someone’s right to privacy?

          • the_af 4 hours ago
            But there's no reasonable indication that the person you're replying to has committed any crime, while there is evidence that some of the people on Epstein's list, including Trump, have committed crimes. In fact, Trump made a big deal of asserting this, back when he didn't expect this to blow back on him.

            It's not the same to ask for public disclosure for people likely to be involved in a crime, for which there is at least some initial (albeit inconclusive) evidence than it is to ask the same of a random person for which there is no evidence at all.

        • _heimdall 5 hours ago
          We have to believe their evaluation no matter what, they're only releasing what they decide to release and can redact along the way.
          • huntertwo 5 hours ago
            Only certain redactions are allowed under this law, so it’s not so cut and dry. There is an enforcement mechanism, tbd if it actually gets used.
            • _heimdall 3 hours ago
              The public in this case is effectively a defense attorney waiting for discovery - we only get what the other side determined to be worth providing and catching them breaking the law is extremely difficult.
              • huntertwo 2 hours ago
                Very true - the one caveat being that certain people know of the existence of things that should be published - lots of way to trip yourself up and get caught if you’re trying to conceal things or otherwise improperly redact information.
          • Zigurd 3 hours ago
            The law specifies which redactions are legal. The enforcement mechanism, IIRC, comes through obstruction.
    • simgt 8 hours ago
      > Just to add a bit more context: after years of trials, one of our former President finally went to jail for a few weeks. And now, they're invited by media all over the country so they can complain about how unfair it was, they published a book about it, sold in the tens of thousands, their son is the new TV's favorite...

      Haha I was wondering where this other side of the pond was. This leaves no doubt. Quelle indignité.

      For others: it's Sarkozy they are referring to, who was sentenced to 5 years of prison but spent only 20 days in it. He's free until his next trial. For having colluded with terrorists.

      • lm28469 6 hours ago
        Sarkozy is out because in France you're free until proven guilty, unless you represent a risk to society or have a high risk of fleeing, neither apply to him, hence he's free until the final verdict
        • harvey9 5 hours ago
          The other poster said sarkozy was sentenced to 5 years. How was that not the result of having been found guilty? I understand there are more trials to follow but do not see why that would free him.
          • lm28469 3 hours ago
            Because you can appeal a decision, and a verdict isn't final until every legal options have been pursued, appeal being one of them

            It's simple really, but if course it's not as outrageous and can't be used as rage bait

        • _heimdall 5 hours ago
          Wait, in France the sentencing is done before trial? Why would he already be sentenced to 5 years without first being tried or convicted?
          • lm28469 3 hours ago
            You can appeal, and until every legal options have been pursued a verdict is not final. Since you're innocent until proven guilty, and you cannot be guilty untill all options have been pursued, you're free until the appeal has been completed.
          • aquassaut 3 hours ago
            No, he was convicted, put in prison, appealed the verdict and was released after 20 days waiting for the next trial
          • atherton94027 4 hours ago
            There was a special law (that his party voted for btw) that added sentencing enhancements for the specific crime he did iirc
            • immibis 2 hours ago
              It's surprisingly often the case that criminals assume everyone else is doing what they're doing, and want harsh punishments for it.

              (see also: the rates of homosexuality among homophobes)

      • 9dev 6 hours ago
        Sarkozy is the whiniest bitch imaginable, and then he even has the gall to write a book about his prison experience.

        Someone wrote in Le Monde, "it's like a man writing a feminist essay because he emptied the dish washer once", and that sums it up pretty well.

    • pjc50 9 hours ago
      It's interesting to see where the "too famous to prosecute" line lies. So far the highest profile casualty seems to have been Prince Andrew - as a result of the files, and NOT as a result of his actual court case with Virginia Giuffre, which he settled before her suicide.

      Maybe it's possible. Berlusconi was brought down by his habit of young women eventually hitting one under 18.

      • Remdo 8 hours ago
        When Berlusconi died, the current Italian government declared a national day of mourning broadcasted on national television. Never went to prison, convicted only 1 time for tax fraud, a lot of his quotes and videos are great source of memes that make the younger generations laugh (owning the Milan football helped him to be liked by younger people).

        Please American people don't do the same mistakes as we did. It's like watching a remake (or a parody) of the same horror movie.

    • noman-land 9 hours ago
      There needs to be a RICO case on the entire criminal abuse network which operated as an open secret for over three decades.

      Andrew Windsor needs to be extradited to the US and face trial.

      We need a referendum about whether we want child rape to be a tool of US policy. I say no.

      • jacquesm 8 hours ago
        > Andrew Windsor needs to be extradited to the US and face trial.

        Reciprocity is a thing...

      • wisty 8 hours ago
        I want to see a tax audit.

        Epstein was running what he said was legal tax avoidance system for his clients.

        I'm not saying they were breaking any laws in it, but Epstein is a dodgy guy (also he used to be involved in IIRC a Ponzi scheme and was previously sacked from a big firm - red flags galore with this guy) and the scheme worked off asset prices and trusts.

        If a bunch of billionaires could manipulate asset prices (selling illiquid assets like mansions and artwork between each other and their trusts) I suspect they could really bring down their tax bills. This would be illegal (I think) but you'd need to untangle a large web of transactions to prove it.

        • SideburnsOfDoom 2 hours ago
          > I want to see a tax audit.

          Yes. IMHO, the parts that they really don't want to come out are the financial ties. It's the connections of money (and power and influence) that is being covered up, more then the child sex crimes that are now known.

    • fifilura 7 hours ago
      > after years of trials, one of our former President finally went to jail for a few weeks. And now, they're invited by media all over the country so they can complain about how unfair it was, they published a book about it, sold in the tens of thousands, their son is the new TV's favorite..

      Yeah this is insightful. Another dictator went to jail in 1920s for staging a coup and used that time for writing his manifesto and getting sympathy from his followers. Some times (often these days) politics just lives on a plane outside the justice system. And it is really creepy.

    • Remdo 8 hours ago
      The victims themselves want the files to be released. Also, we all know how terrible politicians are, but the whole of public opinion should be made aware of how low the bar is.

      Do you know Berlusconi, from the Italian government? He was the Italian version of Donald Trump, and he was involved in a lot of scandals at the time, including being involved with the mafia and, you guessed it, underage girls.

    • tmoertel 6 hours ago
      Regarding this error:

      > like repeating they decreased drugs price by 600%

      The NYT and other media outlets like to point out that this claim is mathematically impossible. However, “cut prices by 600%” is understood perfectly well by most people (but not pedants) to mean “we undid price hikes of 600%.”

      I suspect that this phrasing was chosen as a “wedge” to drive home to the MAGA faithful that the news media is biased against them.

      • kyle-rb 2 hours ago
        Does that logic apply only when the claimed cut is over 100%?

        If I advertise that my store "cut prices by 50%" but the prices are actually only 33% lower (which is the same as undoing a 50% price hike), would it be pedantic to call me out on my bullshit?

        • tmoertel 1 hour ago
          > Does that logic apply only when the claimed cut is over 100%?

          Yes, I’d say.

          It’s the same as the informal usage of “X times smaller” to describe scaling by 1/X. The idiom generally isn’t used unless X > 1. (The exception might be when several values of X are reported together. Then one might say “0.74 times smaller” to maintain parallel form with nearby “4 times smaller” and similar claims.)

    • bromuro 6 hours ago
      Thanks for writing this. I also feel disturbing such morbid outlook to someone’s private digital life.
    • blablabla123 5 hours ago
      Yes I‘m also watching with disbelief. Even more so since media attention in the EU about it seems higher than in the US. Although the recent trove I found especially disturbing.

      I recently watched a documentary where elites from beginning of the 20th century were also portrayed. Self-portrayed as Philanthropists. Moral bankruptcy became obvious, although in other manifestations such as shooting members of worker unions. And the US government did something in form of the New Deal, splitting monopolies and other policies.

      In an optimistic scenario I’d expect something similar. New ways to hold elites accountable and keeping extreme differences in wealth in check.

    • foundddit 9 hours ago
      I think for the duration of this four year term, at the very least, nothing will happen. But there's a bit of hope (possibly cope) that if these people accept an election loss in 2028 and voters keep this anger going, people involved may be charged and imprisoned.

      History shows that it never happens in America and politicians always drop the "it's time for our nation to heal" line, but if the pendulum swings as far in the other direction as it did in the 2024 election, maybe things will be different. And the only hope of that happening is for people to stay pissed.

      One thing I will say is the outrage about this has lasted longer than I initially imagined. America has had a lot of "this controversy won't be forgotten!" stuff that nobody remembers 2 months later. In contrast, I feel like this has been steadily ramping up and maintaining some degree of inertia for 2 years. Will it burn out by 2028? Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised. It was washed out of the news by trans people playing sports and that was somehow the biggest issue in the world. 2028 will undoubtedly have some weird "problem" that we can't yet imagine.

      • fifticon 7 hours ago
        as history has proceeded these past 10 years, I am pretty confident american voters will have forgotten all about in 2028, assuming they still get to vote by then. Right now, I don't have faith in them to remember the purpose when they reach for the toilet paper roll,once they grab it :-/
      • haritha-j 7 hours ago
        "accept election loss" is a wild string of words, but such are th etimes we live in.
    • xandrius 7 hours ago
      I've had the same exact feeling for a while: several people known to be in the files are not the purest people we know and I'm not sure them being there will have any effect whatsoever. Taking Trump, what would really change to his image? All his supporters are already ok with the stuff he did/said and his opponents are already against him.

      All his political/business allies won't easily switch as they stay his connections and money, not his clean image.

      It just feels like a real-life reality show to keep the news flowing and people just enough bewildered and curious to keep coming back for more. Basically the perfect material for a while.

      Especially with all the hyper redacted parts, groups can start literally reading between the lines and make unfounded allegations to create even more clicks.

      • the_af 4 hours ago
        I think Trump being shown with underage girls (or irrefutably implicated in pedophilia) would damage his reputation with his MAGA fanbase. It's the one thing they won't forgive him for, if enough evidence is provided. They already clashed over this, with Trump lashing out against his supporters because of this, seemingly the only crack in their unflinching loyalty.

        I think it's what happens when you cultivate a conspiratorial fanbase: eventually the conspiracies will mention you.

    • tonymet 1 hour ago
      Decades of unresolved corruption scandals , finally a chance to confirm what we suspected about sleazy and deplorable elites . Slim chances, but what else do we have
    • kitsune1 9 hours ago
      The victims themselves were asking for the files to be fully released so that their abusers are held accountable. This was a big "fuck you" to the victims when everything of significance was [REDACTED]
    • earlyreturns 8 hours ago
      Foreign governments running honeytrap operations on powerful perverts like bill clinton is common knowledge amongst anyone interested in knowing about such things, but some people think it is a super big secret that needs to be revealed to the masses. Thomas Massie for instance. I don’t think it’s antisemitism but I’m pretty sure it’s not because of a sudden concern for teenage prostitution, which is a big ongoing problem that could be addressed by legislators crafting policy if they weren’t so busy slinging mud at each other looking for Epstein photos with their political opponents.
  • joymonger 13 hours ago
    This is incredible. How are you hosting all this? There's got to be considerable cost. Meanwhile, this is a genuinely great way to browse through all these files. Seriously impressive work.
    • lukeigel 8 hours ago
      Thank you!

      The original site was on Railway and written in Pug! It crashed after Riley's tweet first went viral, then Riley did the heroic work of caching it all with Cloudflare after waking up to the site being down. After millions of unique visitors we racked up about $10 in costs.

      This time we switched to Next.js 16 + Vercel, used Cloudflare R2 for asset hosting, and used Neon as the db. R2 has free egress, and Vercel + Next is cheap if cached correctly.

      A special someone at Vercel gave us some tips on caching this one earlier today. We started by just using unstable_cache all over the place, and now we're migrating to ISR + full static pre-generation of as many pages as we can via generateStaticParams.

    • dvrp 12 hours ago
      A lot of the files are hosted on Cloudflare so their $0 egress cost helps a lot. Especially given that so many of the files can be considered immutable assets, so we can configure aggressive caching.

      I know that Luke was working on stuff so as not to hit the database as much, but I was in the middle of a flight as that was happening so he'll have to come and provide more details.

  • GaryBluto 11 hours ago
    This is incredibly fascinating, not just because of who he was and the crimes he committed, but to see all this information on a specific person in one place is surreal.
  • 1vuio0pswjnm7 1 hour ago
  • amarant 17 hours ago
    How complete is the material? I've seen "experts" in Swedish news paper DN claim so much is censored it looks like a cover up. Has that been your impression too?
    • lukeigel 17 hours ago
      We have three datasets in Jmail now:

      1. DOJ (The White House's docs that they were required by law to drop yesterday plus many court documents, videos, and other docs from many news cycles this year)

      2. HOUSE_OVERSIGHT (the House Oversight Committee's releases. giant November drop that led to the original Jmail, then some photo drops this month)

      3. Yahoo emails (originally sourced by DDoSecrets, then provided to us, redacted and verified by Drop Site News)

      There is so much material in HOUSE_OVERSIGHT that never appears in DOJ, and vice versa. And then the Yahoo drop reveals even more new material. It feels like three odd slices of a giant dataset that keeps getting released.

      re: people's complaints about yesterday's release having way too many redactions, I have no idea how much they over-redacted. I hear that they will release even more quite soon though.

      • cobertos 15 hours ago
        Why and how is the data from DDoSecrets redacted?

        Do you have a page about each dataset you're sourcing and the background on them like your provide here?

        The "EFTA00000468" saga has me distrusting the authenticity of most of these datasets.

      • mikeyouse 16 hours ago
        Ah I was going to ask about the Yahoo emails.. are those distinct from the cloned Gmail messages or are they in the same inbox on your site?

        Has anyone written a parser for the text messages? A messages-like UI to be able to read through all the texts would be super interesting too. The format DOJ released them in is impossible to follow.

        • dvrp 11 hours ago
          big motivation for the whole project is to help structure the mess that was released
    • medler 17 hours ago
      Yes, it has been redacted far in excess of what the law allows, and the material is a tiny fraction of what the administration was required by law to release by this date
      • wahnfrieden 16 hours ago
        Images were also planted that were not part of the files.
        • epistasis 15 hours ago
          Planted by whom? That were not part of the files? That seems dubious at best. What is your source? It doesn't even make sense.
          • 9dev 6 hours ago
            There is a picture of Bill Clinton with Michael Jackson and Diana Ross that was just publicly available before: https://www.threads.com/@meidastouch/post/DSfEKJslM1H

            It doesn't belong into the Epstein Files, and doesn't need to be censored either, but the way it is framed in the DoJ release implies guilt where there is none.

            • _heimdall 5 hours ago
              How can you be sure the image wasn't part of the files collected during investigation? What makes you so sure Epstein didn't have the file saved somewhere on a device, server, or account that was collected?
              • 9dev 4 hours ago
                I don’t think I expressed a particular opinion here, I just stated where the suspicion comes from.

                That being said, I think we can demand a level of due diligence from public institutions that entails only censoring actual victims on actual pieces of evidence, instead of mindlessly placing black squares on the faces of news article pictures found on his computer. Nevermind that nobody can explain yet how this particular picture ended up in the grand jury files anyway.

          • dboreham 14 hours ago
            Makes sense if you are a criminal.
        • edm0nd 12 hours ago
          Surely you can link me to the exact "planted" images you are talking about...

          who planted them?

          • Zambyte 11 hours ago
            • Arn_Thor 10 hours ago
              That's not the exact same image, though. It's a separate image, from the same time and place. The one released may have been in Epstein's possession and therefore part of the files. Either some DoJ drone just redacted all children and non-celebrities due to procedure, or it was deliberately done in such a way as to make Clinton and Jackson look suspicious. Whatever the reason, this was not a Getty stock image planted in the files.
    • jibal 17 hours ago
      You don't have to lean on "experts" (or experts) or people at HN find these things out: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2025-08-01/epstei...
    • mkoubaa 5 hours ago
      The most incriminating stuff isn't censored, it's been completely destroyed by now
  • skilled 1 hour ago
    Not much to say other than that this is really impressive work. Thanks for putting it all together!
  • umrashrf 17 hours ago
    That's definitely more than 15 GB of free space given by Google! Great work!
    • dvrp 7 hours ago
      gaussian splats alone are >500GBs lol

      (lot of bad quality ones though)

  • Pikamander2 3 hours ago
    You might want to consider getting rid of the Google product logos to avoid a cease-and-desist.
  • 20k 15 hours ago
    Great project, thanks for building it

    >i want you to realize that that dog that hasn't barked is trump.. virignia spent hours at my house with him,, he has never once been mentioned. police chief. etc. im 75 % there

    Hooo boy

  • amelius 3 hours ago
    Is this the public release, or did you filter it down further?
  • dvrp 20 hours ago
    • jtfrench 13 hours ago
      No way. Next level.
  • sieep 17 hours ago
    Keep up the good work boys this is great stuff and is actually a pretty intuitive way to view the files, ive been sharing it for weeks now.
  • anjel 15 hours ago
    Way better than the DOJ UI but a pity the photo captions got stripped away
    • dvrp 7 hours ago
      what photo captions?

      are you talking about OpenGraph metadata or something else that we can fix?

  • tianqi 5 hours ago
    This project is truly next level rather fascinating. Particularly intriguing is observing JEE's considerable interest regarding human intelligence and artificial intelligence, engaging in discussions on these matters with Chomsky and Marvin Minsky.
  • blauditore 10 hours ago
    The "Quora Digest" email killed me.

    Most of the mails read like fake ones from a video game. Maybe it's because most of them were written by an older generation who uses more classic letter-style writing.

  • vldszn 2 hours ago
    Wow, that’s impressive! Are you planning to open-source the project? =)
  • yakkomajuri 3 hours ago
    Complete side note but anyone else bothered by how they type? I guess email was being used much like texting here but still. Seems it's not just Epstein either.

    > Hi Jeffrey long time now hear don't sweat Patterson was with trump last week small dinner he really would make a good financial steward no agenda woody is busting his ass for him Rudy too wiki leaks tonight on Hillary stopped caring fed wants to raise I guess terrible luck brexit Deutschebank then probably some terror thing smart to be out of it best jonathan

    The above is from Jonathan Farkas

    • subdavis 1 hour ago
      Wild guess: some kind of elite status signaling. “no time for punctuation im so busy very important u understand”
  • dostick 5 hours ago
    How can you post those emails and make a joke out of them - they have this footer that clearly states that if you are not a recipient you must delete the email immediately. Whole business world have this footer for a reason, for situations like this, so you can be sure your emails will not go public.
    • throwfaraway135 5 hours ago
      Although in principle I agree with the sentiment, sometimes for difficult illnesses we need to accept the side effects of the cure.
  • sali0 3 hours ago
    Should have called it Blackmail
  • novoreorx 17 hours ago
    .world domain is a perfectly fit for this project, love to see more power brokers' profile joining this Jmail world
  • Metacelsus 1 hour ago
    "LIVE! Melinda Gates on How Empowering Women Changes the World"

    lol

  • rynn 17 hours ago
    Where did you get all the data? The justice.gov site didn’t have a mass download option that I could find.
    • slazien 14 hours ago
      https://www.jmail.world/about

      "We compiled these Epstein estate emails from the House Oversight Committee release by converting the PDFs to structured text with an LLM"

      and:

      "Data Sources

          Gmail emails: House Oversight Committee
          Yahoo emails: DDoSecrets (brought to us by Drop Site News)
      
      Technology

      Document parsing and extraction powered by reducto"

      • dvrp 10 hours ago
        Yes, also many were PPM images (or encoded as such) in PDFs and then I used (cheap/light) multimodal LLMs to classify documents from photos. It was surprisingly cheap: <$1 for a few thousand PDFs / Images.
  • stocksinsmocks 16 hours ago
    Epstein had a subscription to Intelligence Squared. I feel like his whole character has come into focus for me.

    I would have put the “release” part in scare quotes as anything important has been redacted.

  • ok123456 17 hours ago
    https://www.jmail.world/thread/HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026632?email=...

    Nice using self-emails as a knowledge base.

    • dvrp 7 hours ago
      lol
  • sweca 18 hours ago
    Jemini is such a nice touch
  • kevin_thibedeau 17 hours ago
    Wonder how much that Clinton in a blue dress painting will go for.
  • tacker2000 16 hours ago
    Incredible! Great work!

    One suggestion: please add previous/next navigation on the images, so that one doesnt have to open an image, close, open again.

    • mastermedo 12 hours ago
      ditto for email. Usually I open one email on the phone and slide left-right or right-left to navigate between adjacent emails.
  • keepamovin 8 hours ago
    I understand the desire to make a suite of apps, and to create something cool for people to play with. Is your motivation to involve your creation with this topic specifically because you desire to expose people doing bad things, for the righteousness and morality of such?

    Also, do you feel it's more important that the information simply "gets out there" than there exist a coherent set of theses addressing questions like: 1) what was the nature, scope and purpose of the hustle Epstein was fronting/running? 2) Who unequivocally did bad things related to this?

    It's not an either or, but right now it appears the topic is data without conclusion.

    I think it would be interesting to target an AI at all the data and have it devise a set of theses with support. My feeling is the topic remains in a state of "100% data, 0% conclusions" - which appears to be a way to sate public curiosity while avoiding consequence.

    • dvrp 7 hours ago
      Jemini has access to the data to help make sense of it.

      We are working on better embeddings including image embeddings.

  • chirau 14 hours ago
    I clicked on attachments, then images. There are only 9 images in this whole release?
    • tomtomtom777 7 hours ago
      Instead of attachment, click on the second tab on top of the screen.
    • dvrp 7 hours ago
      weird — there’s thousands

      we should bugfix

      which url did you do that?

      can you help repro?

  • nee1r 7 hours ago
    being able to search through the files when they're purposefully so obfuscated is great
  • KellyCriterion 8 hours ago
    Wow, you cloned GMail completely within a short timefram? It looks more or less like the original Google product.

    You could make a spinoff after this Epstein wave is gone: Use the front end to build a commercially viable product! :-)

    Thanks for the ton of work!

  • aizk 18 hours ago
    Shoot I wish I would've have known there was a collab, would've loved to participate in this.
  • the_gipsy 18 hours ago
    The back button doesn't work
    • lukeigel 18 hours ago
      In which app? Photos, email, etc? Tested across each.
      • dvrp 17 hours ago
        Also which platform? Mobile? I’ve noticed some burger menus failing on mobile.
  • fredrickd 20 hours ago
    the J suite of products grows larger
  • sprybear 3 hours ago
    impressive stuff
  • ned_roberts 15 hours ago
    Search for “LSJ”: Little Saint James, his island.
  • SilentM68 14 hours ago
    Hmm, no mention of BTC origins :(
  • wltr 6 hours ago
    Oh my, I think that’s the most impressive work I’ve seen here on the HN. Very well done! I hope the public would explore the whole thing pretty quickly. Personally, I afraid they, the files, were highly tampered with, so obviously a lot could be hidden. Yet, still, that’s an achievement we have this opportunity to explore the whole thing, I guess. So this project is impressive in many ways. I enjoyed exploring the interface, can’t believe that’s just a clone, not a real Google product!
  • EnPissant 8 hours ago
    Is this like JDate but for email?
  • dash2 14 hours ago
    I would be interested to hear HN views on Richard Hanania's take on Epstein: https://www.richardhanania.com/p/the-inverted-reality-of-eps....
    • thasFqr12 14 hours ago
      Michael Tracey, who influenced Hanania, has been on a wild crusade against all Epstein victims and has tried to discredit them.

      He also avoids all intelligence connections. He never asks why Epstein got the job at Bear Stearns after leaving as a teacher at an expensive private school where William Barr's father was the headmaster.

      He never publishes material like the officially released birthday book entry from Eliot Wolk, trader at Bear Stearns, who confirmed that Robert Maxwell, Ghislaine's father, had an account at Bear Stearns and who teased Epstein about knowing teenage Ghislaine.

      So it is now officially confirmed that Epstein knew Robert and Ghislaine much earlier than previously known. And that he knew Robert in the Iran Contra years where Robert was dealing with Adnan Khashoggi.

      Tracey and Hanania are doing extremely poor journalistic work here by just focusing on the subset of Epstein victims that were over 18 and took money for the services.

      Not reporting at all on the intelligence connections seems suspect as well.

      • linhns 9 hours ago
        Tracey seems to me to be a dishonest broker that is paid to promote anti-interventionist and related agenda
    • kg 12 hours ago
      "Especially since the MeToo era began, we’re too credulous about these things. So we have globs of money going to Epstein accusers and their lawyers, while nothing has ever been proved by the standards of the criminal justice system."

      Feels like someone with an axe to grind over MeToo turning Jeffrey Epstein of all people (???) into a martyr figure for their pet issue. I don't know why someone would feel compelled to defend him when he's not even alive to thank you for it. The idea that vast amounts of evidence and accusations exist yet nothing bad happened whatsoever is so wildly implausible that I can't grasp the mindset that would lead to openly publishing this perspective on Epstein. We found out from the most recent disclosures that people reported Epstein's inappropriate behavior to the FBI as early as 1996 and it wasn't investigated. One need only look at the amount of detail on his Wikipedia page ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Epstein#First_criminal... ) to get a sense of why accusations against him are at least treated as credible.

      I totally get not finding this issue interesting or not caring about what he did to his victims, though I can't really empathize with that position, I understand it. But writing like Hanania's feels beyond the pale and unnecessary.

      • zzrrt 10 hours ago
        >> nothing has ever been proved by the standards of the criminal justice system

        This flabbergasted me at first. Admittedly I had to refresh my memory that he died in jail awaiting trial, but he was still convicted once before that! The fact it was pre-MeToo should make it more damning, per his logic. I guess he’s saying there were no convictions after he became infamous, but there’s a caveat that he died awaiting trial, and that plus the prior conviction just makes this statement seem disingenuous or sloppy at best.

  • gilfoyle_7 13 hours ago
    cool stuff boys
  • vigneshtd 3 hours ago
    this is so f cool ;)
  • rc_kas 10 hours ago
    cody rudland is a hero
  • randall 17 hours ago
    this is amazing
  • B1FF_PSUVM 14 hours ago
    The flight log data + visualizer is interesting. Apparently not into crossing the equator ...

    P.S. feel like a private eye perusing the Amazon purchases. Nabokov and Nietzsche, oh my.

  • gosub100 14 hours ago
    Lots of Bill Gates involvement, and Sergey Brin.
  • romanleeb 10 hours ago
    amazing
  • tonymet 15 hours ago
    Because of JDate it took a minute to realize JMail stood for Jeffrey
    • userbinator 11 hours ago
      You made me imagine an alternate universe where there is a Jeffrey programming language and the man is named Java Epstein.
  • lifestyleguru 16 hours ago
    Everytime I watch these private jets and helicopters I wonder why flying economy class has to be so miserable in terms of horizontal, vertical, and leg space.
  • oneandonley1 13 hours ago
    serch for lolli or cp smh this guy was trash
  • gnabgib 20 hours ago
    Discussion (144 points, 29 days ago, 11 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46004118
    • dang 18 hours ago
      Despite the upvotes, that one only spent 8 minutes on HN's frontpage, so I think we can treat this repost as a non-dupe.
    • dvrp 20 hours ago
      I saw, but the project has changed since then. There's now Google Photos, improvements to Drive, Jemini (LLM that can assist when understanding the files), and JFlights for flight tracking.

      I sent an email to the hn email with more details!

    • lukeigel 20 hours ago
      Last night we made a ton of new apps and we added "the Epstein" files which DOJ dropped yesterday.

      Also since that post we worked with Drop Site News + DDoSecrets to post new Yahoo emails that no one has let the public see yet.

  • unbelievably 15 hours ago
    [dead]
  • bubbi 9 hours ago
    [dead]
  • lisbbb 15 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • sgentle 11 hours ago
      > What I am saying is that women make bad choices [...] and later regret it

      Yes, especially when those women are also children. One of the many reasons it's illegal to have sex with them and especially illegal to rent their bodies to your friends.

    • noduerme 14 hours ago
      Transporting a minor for sex is illegal, regardless of whether they are considered of age in the jurisdiction they're being taken to.

      But besides that, you're saying he ran a blackmail operation, which seems likely. If the girls he pimped out were of legal age, that's a lot less leverage to blackmail his targets with, isn't it?

    • gosub100 15 hours ago
      So your claim is that someone is not a victim unless they are physically restrained or imprisoned? Can you give some examples of clear, definitive "legitimate victims" for contrast? Or are you insinuating that victim hood cannot be claimed unless they both come from the same income strata? Because otherwise the victims incentive to make money outweighs the possibility that the claim is true, that a wealthy person could in fact be a rapist?
    • tonyhart7 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
  • TechDebtDevin 16 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • mrinfinite 14 hours ago
    Its cool to see the mail. I now think he did die absolutely.. i had a suspicion he didnt.. but him and chomsky are fucking retarded.. feels like scrolling through twitter for horrible handles trying to sound smart and just lil bitches.. It makes me happier that my work is not very smart, but compared to these guys we arent that bad. I mean he was a geopolitical analyst. he may have been book smart in some sense cause he ordered liebniz at some pont.. but also just sounded like he was super high (probably wasnt)... very surprsing..
  • andrewinardeer 18 hours ago
    • dvrp 18 hours ago
      just link dupe, but not content dupe

      read rest of the thread with more context on why