What the federation is mining.
Every page the FBI has declassified. Every CIA CREST document. Every Project Blue Book case file. Every SEC filing. Every federal court docket. Every campaign donation. Every arXiv preprint. Billions of pages in scope — being processed together, one node at a time. Members mine and read. Public visitors see the scope, not the data.
What's in scope.
These are the upstream sources the federation is processing. Any one of them is bigger than a single hard drive — that's the point. Each node specializes in a corpus and shares its work with the rest of the network. Add your node and the library grows.
FBI Vault
The FBI's public reading room — every file the Bureau has released through FOIA.
CIA Reading Room (CREST)
The CIA Records Search Tool — the agency's declassified document collection going back to its founding.
USAF Project Blue Book
The Air Force's official UFO investigation files from 1947–1969 — every report, witness statement, and government analysis.
Pentagon AARO
The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office — congressional testimony, annual reports, and historical record reviews on UAP.
Federal Courts (PACER / CourtListener)
Federal district, appellate, bankruptcy, and Supreme Court records — pleadings, opinions, dockets, exhibits, and orders.
SEC EDGAR
Every filing from every U.S. public company — annual reports, quarterly statements, insider trades, M&A disclosures, IPO prospectuses.
FEC Campaign Finance
Every contribution to every federal candidate, PAC, party committee, and Super PAC — donor names, employers, amounts, recipients.
USAspending.gov
Every federal contract, grant, and loan disbursement — recipient, amount, awarding agency, purpose, performance location.
Scientific literature
Open preprint servers and federal repositories — physics, math, computer science, medicine, astrophysics, earth science.
The data is for members.
Federation members mine the corpora and read the extracted intelligence. Public visitors see the scope of what's being processed — not the data itself. Joining is mining. Your node hosts a shard, helps process documents, and earns access to the whole library through federation.
How the federation works
The library is a distributed file system for the public record. Each Enki node hosts the corpora it specializes in and shares its work with the rest of the network.
Source corpora
Provenance-organized collections — FBI Vault, CIA CREST, USAF Blue Book, federal courts, SEC EDGAR, scientific literature. Each carries a stable federation_id and is content-hashed end-to-end. When two nodes have the same file, that's one identity, not two copies.
Topic lenses
Cross-corpus views that auto-aggregate by focal entity or keyword. A "Jeffrey Epstein" topic library, for example, pulls in every doc from any source corpus that mentions him — no manual curation, no duplicates, recomputed as new content lands.
Distributed by design
The catalog is a directory. Bytes flow peer-to-peer between member nodes. Multiple nodes can host the same corpus; subscribing nodes pick whichever mirror is closest or freshest, content-hash verify, then ingest locally. No single point of failure.