The team behind Jmail, a platform that transformed Jeffrey Epstein’s emails into an accessible inbox format, has introduced a new venture leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) to craft encyclopedic entries based on the same email collection.
Known as Jikipedia, this website imitates the structure of Wikipedia and curates comprehensive profiles on individuals referenced in the emails disclosed by the US House Oversight Committee. These entries detail personal backgrounds, the extent of communication with Epstein, accounts of visits to his properties, and highlight alleged associations, potential awareness of Epstein’s illicit activities, and potential breaches of laws by the individuals.
Apart from individual profiles, Jikipedia features sections on Epstein’s properties, detailing their acquisition history and allegations of activities conducted there. Moreover, the platform delves into Epstein’s business ties, encompassing interactions with prominent financial institutions.
Although the entries seem to draw from source materials, the developers have acknowledged the potential for inaccuracies. In a statement on February 14, Jmail’s X account mentioned plans for users to suggest modifications, flag inaccuracies, and confirm the accuracy of entire articles soon.
This project stems from the success of Jmail, founded by Luke Igel and Riley Walz following the public release of over 20,000 pages of Epstein’s emails. Leveraging Google’s Gemini AI for optical character recognition, the duo converted the documents into searchable text. Originally designed for email exploration, Jmail has since evolved into a suite of interconnected applications reminiscent of the Google ecosystem, such as JPhotos, JDrive, and JFlights, each organizing different facets of the public records into searchable collections. Additionally, the developers introduced features like JVR, Jamazon, Jemini, Jotify, JMessage, and Jacebook, mimicking popular social platforms but solely comprising content sourced from the Epstein files.
