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JeffTube Goes Viral After Jmail Launch, Hosting Epstein Files Videos in a Scrollable Feed

JeffTube, a new website styled like YouTube, has gone live hosting video files released by the US Department of Justice in the Jeffrey Epstein investigation.

The platform was announced on February 6 by Matheus, a full-stack developer associated with Midjourney. Within hours, posts about the site crossed 1.3 million views on X, reflecting strong online interest in the latest batch of publicly released records.

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JeffTube, a website styled like YouTube, launched by Matheus on February 6, hosts video files from the US Department of Justice's Jeffrey Epstein investigation, containing footage from surveillance recordings. The site, an extension of Jmail, currently lists 1,083 videos and is part of a series of open-source projects organizing Epstein-related documents, attracting significant online interest.
JeffTube Goes Viral The iral YouTube-Style Site Hosting Epstein Files Videos Into a Scrollable Feed

What the site contains?

JeffTube focuses on MP4 video files included in the DOJ's recent document release. On January 31, 2026, the United States Department of Justice published more than 3.5 million pages of material related to Jeffrey Epstein, including over 2,000 videos and 180,000 images. This followed a December 2025 release of more than 13,000 files.

The site currently lists 1,083 videos organised into playlists such as Person Cam, Cell Cam, Elevator Cam and Lobby Cam. Much of the footage comes from surveillance recordings at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, where Epstein died in August 2019.

The interface resembles YouTube, allowing users to watch, comment and browse through video categories in a familiar layout.

JeffTube is now available at https://jmail.world/jefftube

JeffTube is an extension of Jmail, a Gmail-style site that reorganised Epstein-related emails from the DOJ release into a searchable format. The same team has also created other platforms to sort documents and images into structured online archives.

JeffTube follows the success of Jmail, a web tool that has crossed 450 million pageviews amid growing public interest in the case files. Jmail is designed to mimic Google's Gmail interface, allowing users to explore millions of Epstein-related documents as if browsing an email inbox. Instead of sorting through tens of thousands of PDFs hosted on Google Drive, users can navigate messages by date, sender and thread format.

Earlier this month, the group launched a Wikipedia-style database compiling names and references from the files. It was later renamed Jwiki. The projects are open source and hosted on GitHub, allowing others to review the code or build alternative mirrors.

Due to heavy traffic, infrastructure support was reportedly provided by the CEO of Vercel to manage server load during peak demand. Jmail alone has crossed 450 million views, according to figures shared by the team.

Users accessing JeffTube should keep the following in mind:

  • The content consists of investigative material and surveillance footage that some viewers may find sensitive.
  • Playback issues have been reported on certain browsers; switching browsers may resolve errors.
  • Search and filtering tools are still basic compared to major video platforms.
  • As the site is a third-party archive, users may wish to cross-reference material with official DOJ releases.

Online reactions have ranged from praise for improving access to public records to concerns about relying on a single source. Some users have called for additional open-source mirrors to ensure broader access to the files.

The launch of JeffTube shows a growing trend of developers reorganising large government document releases into structured, easy-to-navigate platforms for public viewing.

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