New Delhi, Feb. 10 -- Amid the growing chatter over the recently released documents in connection with the convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, a new tool, Jmail, has crossed over 450 million pageviews. It is a web tool designed to mimic Google's Gmail and allows the public to access millions of documents related to Epstein, just like they would access their own email account.

The US Department of Justice (DOJ) released the Epstein files on 30 January, opening a floodgate of material for people who have been trying to comprehend the pages, which contain names of some very prominent figures, travel logs, flight details, and images.

Jmail is the brainchild of internet artist Riley Walz and a web developer, Luke Igel. It was unveiled i...