Two enthusiasts took a set of approximately 20,000 pages of Jeffrey Epstein's correspondence, published by the House Oversight Committee, and used AI to conveniently organize them into a Gmail-like interface.
It works just like a real email, including search and sorting by contacts, so anyone interested in exploring the correspondence is welcome to do so. Each email allows you to view the original document from the archive to verify its accuracy.
Technically, the project looks very cool, and it seems to be an example of how a couple of people used AI to do useful public work that would have taken weeks or months to do before.
It would be nice if the full Epstein archive, which is supposed to be released after the relevant law is passed in the United States, was released in a similar way. Because it's difficult for an unprepared person to dig through it in its raw form.
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