After Jefftube, the Internet Turns Epstein Files into a Clickable Conspiracy Map on Replit
From Jmail to Jefftube: How developers are making Epstein files accessible

The US Department of Justice's release of millions of pages tied to late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was billed as a transparency measure. However, the avalanche of court records, emails, videos and images has taken on a second life online.
What began as a document dump has evolved into tools that allow anyone on the internet to browse footage, trace names and explore timelines with a few clicks.
First came 'Jmail,' a Gmail lookalike to navigate emails related to Epstein files, then came 'JeffTube,' a YouTube-style site built to host and sort the government's video files. Now, developers have gone one step further, turning the large data dump into interactive network maps on the coding platform Replit.
Jmail Reorganises the Email Archive
The first major redesign of the data dump by the DOJ came through a web-based tool called Jmail. According to reports, the platform converts tens of thousands of publicly released Epstein-linked emails into a Gmail-style interface. Instead of navigating scanned PDFs and fragmented court exhibits, users can browse messages in a familiar inbox layout.

Jmail was reportedly developed by internet artist Riley Walz and software engineer Luke Igel, chief executive of AI video editing firm Kino. The creators say the tool does not introduce new material but compiles emails already disclosed through court proceedings and official releases.
Explaining the motivation, Igel said usability was the central issue, 'The emails were just so hard to read,' noting that many were buried in poorly scanned formats.
The site uses optical character recognition and AI-based text conversion to make low-quality scans searchable.
JeffTube Repackages DOJ Video Files
Soon after Jmail gained traction, its creators launched a second project in early February: a site styled after YouTube that hosts more than 1,000 MP4 files from the DOJ archive.

Known online as 'JeffTube,' the platform presents surveillance clips from Epstein Island, recorded testimony and other video material in a searchable interface.
The site states that approximately 140 videos containing explicit content remain unlisted and directs users to official government repositories instead. Features such as subscriptions and engagement counters mirror mainstream video platforms.
Replit App Turns Files Into a Network Map
Now, the most recent and the most innovative iteration moves beyond inboxes and video libraries. Developers using Replit have built interactive applications that transform names, dates, and references from released documents into visual network graphs.
WAIT WHAT🤯
— Elja (@Eljaboom) February 17, 2026
THE EPSTEIN FILES ARE NOW A LIVE INTERACTIVE APP ON REPLIT.
ONE GUY TURNED THE ENTIRE DOCUMENT INTO A CLICKABLE MAP OF CONNECTIONS.pic.twitter.com/CeoNkxdw5l
One widely shared version maps more than 5,000 individuals and thousands of documented relationships based on publicly available court filings and correspondence.
If you land on the files explorer page, you can search for a name and see connections drawn between people referenced in emails or investigative records. The app includes a disclaimer stating that the appearance of a name in the files does not imply guilt.
Public figures closely linked to Epstein, such as US President Donald Trump and the former Prince Andrew, also appear in the tool's search trends.
At this point, given the speed at which these tools continue to spread and evolve, the Epstein files are no longer just static records; they have now become interactive data points.
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