Disinfodrome is a cluster of systems running Open Semantic Search to provide access to a vast number of documents of public interest. There is a team server available to subscribers of this Substack and it has the following datasets available:
Active Measures 2016 U.S. Senate investigation - five volumes, 1342 pages on Russia’s election meddling.
Mueller Report - 635 pages of results from the investigation.
Mueller FD-302 forms - 5668 pages of contemporaneous notes by FBI agents working for the Muller investigation.
Crossfire Hurricane - 551 pages from a dumpster fire grade FOIA response by the FBI, only marginally usable.
Zoe Lofgren’s archive of Congressional posts on January 6th - 1927 pages.
January 6th Final Report - 846 pages from the committee.
January 6th Transcripts - 2726 pages of transcripts from interviews of 42 witnesses.
This collection of almost 14,000 documents, once in the clutches of OSS, provides a commanding view of the Trump years as seen through the eyes of Congress. I have a lot of other stuff I use but I’m going to need to check on copyright and such to be sure I can make these datasets available.
George Washington University Capitol Riot Documents.
The 65 Project - ethics complaints on 65 election denying lawyers.
New Mexico Fraudit Report - 261 pages of blithering.
Durham Report - 316 pages of wishes that did not come true.
House FBI Politicization Report - 1051 pages of absolute tripe.
Steele Dossier - now largely discredited but still interesting.
DHS/FBI Intelligence Failures Report.
Cyber Ninjas FOIA - over 34,000 pages I’ve never reviewed.
Trump campaign 2020 FEC report - 211,827 pages.
So there you have it. A small mountain of FOIA sand that no doubt has a lot of gold nuggets in the mix. And a small mountain range of other stuff that could also use more eyes on it, assuming I’m permitted to share.
If you are an actual person interested in a deeper conversation the best way to start is by sending a connect request to Neal Rauhauser on LinkedIn.