Jikipedia Makes Falling into an Epstein Rabbit Hole Easier Than Ever

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For all the unspeakable horrors they contain, the tranche of Jeffrey Epstein’s emails most recently published by the DOJ has also proven morbidly fascinating to the Chronically Online and casual social media user alike. This trove of typo-laden correspondences between Epstein and the global elite has understandably captured the attention of those not wrapped up in his international cabal by offering a rare insight into the not-so-surprisingly dim minds of the most powerful people on the planet. It also provides equally captivating slivers of cathartic mundanity, like the Xbox Live permaban Jeff received in 2013.

But this heap of uncontextualized data is a labyrinthine mess when compared to something as elegant and browsable as everyone’s favorite online encyclopedia.

Enter Jikipedia, a new Wikipedia clone created to present the contents of the released files in a familiar, easy-to-bop-around format. In addition to profiling individuals implicated in Epstein’s emails and cataloging the scope of their communication with Epstein and visits to Little St. James, the site also has entries dedicated to the notorious financier’s properties, his dealings with various corporations and institutions, as well as deeper dives into case specifics.

This new wiki is from the makers of JMail, which launched in November 2025 to present the documents released by the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA) in a navigable browser-based simulacrum of Google’s popular email service. Put out by software engineers Riley Walz and Luke Igel, JMail has grown from a humble Gmail-skinned interface where you are “logged in” as [email protected] and participate in a simulation of his interactions with Google products.

There’s JPhoto for indexing the myriad disturbing images in the EFTA drops. And JFlights, of course, chronicles the comings and goings of the Lolita Express and its passengers. There are even a few non-Alphabet JMail spinoffs like Jamazon in there for anyone who would like to see Jeffrey’s bona fide Amazon purchases. (These are mostly benign essentials like toothbrushes and sensible chinos, but the few standout orders in there—like the toddler toys and giant burlap sacks with dollar signs on them—are on-the-nose enough to justify the entire project.)

Jikipedia, like the rest of the JMail endeavors, comes with a major caveat: AI. The developers used a clone of Google’s Gemini (”Jemini’) to sift through and organize the initial JMail files and have continued to rely on AI for processing the subsequent 3.5 million pages released in January and filling out Jikipedia’s pages.

Given AI’s historically tenuous relationship with the truth, particularly with already credulous human operators, the findings gleaned from the pages of Jikipedia are best taken with a generous serving of salt—at least until humans have had a chance to fact-check those claims. Fortunately, a tweet from the official JMail account indicates that Jikipedia “users will be able to request changes, mark inaccuracies, and verify that an entire article is correct soon.”

And if Jikipedia is anything like its namesake, it’s only a matter of time before we see full-blown pedantic edit wars breaking out about Jeffrey’s strange, frequent use of “whoops.”

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