A few weeks ago, Luke Igel had an idea. Like many Americans, Igel, a 26-year-old software engineer and tech CEO based in San Francisco, had been looking through the latest dump of Jeffrey Epstein ’s emails and discussing them with his friends. But he was finding the data dump both hard to read and hard to contextualize. What these emails really represented, Igel thought, was a guy who sits around on his ipad or Blackberry all day emailing everyone he knows.
“My friend was talking about all this stuff he was finding,” says Igel. “And I found it impressive he’d been able to infer that from these very hard to read PDFs. I found that they were hard to read as emails.”
To solve the problem, Igel, who runs an AI video assistant company , called up his old friend, Riley Walz, a fellow Zoome

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