The Jmail team has been on a serious building sprint lately. The latest addition: Jwiki, their Wikipedia-style resource built around the Epstein files, is now open for public contributions.

This development was announced by the team with a thread on X:

Anyone can sign in, propose edits, and browse the full revision history of every article on the site. Talk pages are in too, straight out of the Mediawiki playbook, complete with edit diffs, article watching, notifications, and labeled bot edits so you can see exactly what changed and who (or what) changed it.

Jwiki first went live on February 14 as an AI-generated, read-only resource compiling Jmail email data into profiles of people connected to Epstein. Each article covers recorded visits to his estates, the volume of emails exchanged, and potential legal violations with specific US codes cited. The launch post hit 8.2 million views on X in a matter of days.

Edits still need admin approval before going live, and the team openly admitted they’re still working out anti-vandalism tools. The long-term goal is fully open Wikipedia-style editing where the community self-corrects over time.

One user suggested using an LLM as an automated guardrail for spam and obvious bad-faith edits, which isn’t a bad idea given what Wikipedia talk pages can turn into. Some people in the replies weren’t optimistic, calling out edit wars and bias as inevitable.

jwiki-propose-edits-reaction

The Jmail team has been putting out updates fast. JeffTube launched just days ago as a full YouTube clone hosting over a thousand DOJ-released Epstein videos, now sitting under the same jmail.world roof. Before that came Jmail, JPhotos, JDrive, JFlights, and Jamazon, all of which we covered back in December.

Jmail alone crossed 450 million views earlier this month, with Vercel’s CEO jumping in to cover the server costs. Jwiki going community-editable is the next piece of what’s shaping up to be a pretty thorough public archive of the Epstein files.

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Dwayne Cubbins
2825 Posts

I cover fast-moving stories across apps, online platforms, and everyday tech — phones, wearables, consoles, and whatever else people are fighting with this week. Bugs, rollouts, scams, policy enforcement, and the occasional internet-culture rabbit hole are all fair game. My goal is simple — make confusing tech news readable. When I'm not working, I'm working out or chilling with my dog. Got a tip? You can find me on X @dcubbins.

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