Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Digital-Evidence”
When Digital Evidence Disappears: The Epstein Files and Our Uncomfortable Truth
There’s something deeply unsettling about watching evidence vanish in real-time. Yesterday, the US Department of Justice accidentally published documents from the Epstein files that were… let’s just say, significantly more revealing than they intended. Within hours, the document was gone from the government website. But here’s the thing about the internet in 2025 – nothing ever truly disappears, does it?
I’ve been working in IT for over two decades now, and one of the first things you learn is that data deletion is rarely absolute. There are backups, archives, and in this case, thousands of people who downloaded those PDFs the moment they appeared. The DOJ’s fumble – whether intentional or through sheer incompetence – has created a situation where the evidence is simultaneously everywhere and nowhere. It’s on hard drives around the world, but officially, according to the US government, it was never meant to exist in the public sphere.