Cool to see this here. It’s funny because we do so many huge, complex, multiyear projects at Free Law Project, but this is the most viral any of our work has ever gone!
Anyway, I made X-ray to analyze the millions of documents we have in CourtListener so that we can try to educate people about the issue.
The analysis was fun. We used S3 batch jobs, but we haven’t done the hard part of looking at the results and reporting them out. One day.
> Information Leaking from Redaction Marks: Even when content is properly removed, the redaction marks themselves can leak some information if not done carefully. For example, if you have a black box exactly covering a word, the length of that black box gives a clue to the word’s length (and potentially its identity).
Does X-ray employ glyph spacing attacks and try to exploit font metric leaks?
No, we worked with researchers that developed that kind of system, but didn't broadcast our work b/c the research was too sensitive. Seems the cat is out the bag now though.
I think the combination of AI and font-metrics is going to be wild though. You ought to be able to make a system that can figure out likely words based on the unredacted ones and the redaction's size. I haven't seen any redaction system yet that protects against this.
I haven't gone through more than just 10% of the files released today, but noticed that at least EFTA00037069.pdf for example has a `/Prev` pointer, meaning the previous revision of the file is available inside of the PDF itself. In this case, the difference is minor, but I'm guessing if it's in one file, it could be more. You can run `qpdf --show-object=trailer EFTA00037069.pdf` on a PDF file to see for yourself if it's there.
I'm almost fully convinced that someone did this bad intentionally, together with the bad redactions, as surely people tasked with redacting a bunch of files receive some instructions on what to do/not to do?
Hmmm.. The more I think about this the more any font kerning is likely a major leak for redaction. Even if the boxes have randomness applied to them, the words around a blacked out area have exact positioning that constrains the text within so that only certain letter/space combinations could fit between them. With a little knowledge of the rendering algorithm and some educated guessing about the text a bruit force search may be able to do a very credible job of discovering the actual text. This isn't my field. Anyone out there that has actually worked on this problem?
As someone who's built an entire business on "anti-screenshots" this is brilliant.
PDF redaction fails are everywhere and it's usually because people don't understand that covering text with a black box doesn't actually remove the underlying data.
I see this constantly in compliance. People think they're protecting sensitive info but the original text is still there in the PDF structure.
Not to mention some PDF editors preserve previous edits in the PDF file itself, which people also seems unaware of. A bit more user friendly description of the feature without having to read the specification itself: https://developers.foxit.com/developer-hub/document/incremen...
As a test, select with your mouse the entire first line of paragraph number 90, and then paste it into a text editor or a shell. The unredacted text appears!
Adobe Pro, when used properly, will redact anything in a PDF permanently.
Whoever did these "bad" redactions doesn't even know how to use a PDF Editor.
We have paralegals and lawyers "mark for redaction", then review the documents, then "apply redactions". It's literally be done by thousands of lawyers/paralegals for decades. This is just someone not following the process and procedure, and making mistakes. It's actually quite amateurish. You should never, ever screw up redactions if you follow the proper process. Good on the X-ray project on trying to find errors.
I just want to add, applying black highlights on top of text is in fact, the "old" way of redaction, as it was common to do this, and then simply print the paper with the black bars, and send the paper as the final product.
Whoever did it is probably old, and may have done it thinking they were going to print it on paper afterwards!! Just guessing as to why someone would do this.
Or they may not understand how PDF works and think that it's the same as paper.
Especially with the "draw a black box over it" method, the text also stops being trivially mouse-selectable (even if CTRL+A might still work).
Another possibility is, of course, that whoever was responsible for this knew exactly what they were doing, but this way they can claim a honest mistake rather than intentionally leaking the data.
A while back I did a little work with a company that were meant to help us improve our security posture. I terminated the contract after they sent me documents in which they’d redacted their own AWS keys using this method.
Any attorney or law enforcement that works for the US Federal Government receives very, very comprehensive instructions on how to redact information on basically the first day of training. There is absolutely zero doubt among any of my DOGE'd friends that this was 100 percent on purpose malicious compliance.
I wasn't sure of this, even though sometimes you'd see remains of the original characters near rectangles edges.. does this mean the leaked documents have been de-redacted ?
Why would that be the case? The government isn't redacting "yes we contacted aliens" they're redacting information about military capabilities that might be of use to adversaries.
Is there a good free tool to properly redact PDFs? My workflow is to place black annotation rectangles on top and then print as PDF with "force rasterization" on. The resulting PDF files then just consist of pages with one image each. But this tends to be really suboptimal, because it's usually a grayscale or color rasterization, so file sizes are very large vs. monochrome PDFs with CCITT G3/G4 compression (which is absolutely what you want for text content, excellent compression and lossless). Post-processing PDFs to convert them to CCITT is rather annoying and I only know of CLI ways.
Given that no U.S. or Israeli citizen apart from Epstein and Maxwell has experienced severe repercussions and Andrew Windsor is the perfect fall guy, there is the possibility that nothing will be revealed from these uncovered redactions.
The releases haven't yielded anything so far. For all we know, Epstein used other methods of communications for the really sensitive stuff. This would not be a surprise, since the whole Maxwell family was deep into tech (Magellan, Chiliad) and Ehud Barak was the head of Israeli military intelligence in the 1980s.
The story is going to be closed in a bipartisan manner except that it might be used to remove some unwanted politicians. The New York Times has already released an article that "explains" Epstein's wealth which names all figures that appear in "conspiracy theories" in an innocent way. Basically, they claim that Epstein could just steal from billionaires like Wexner and the billionaires would roll over and do nothing.
That is the official confirmation that all intelligence angles will be squashed in a bipartisan manner. For all we know, the "incompetence" in the redactions may be a way of saying: "See, we have nothing to hide."
Hilarious that DOJ didn’t flatten the layers so you can unredact stuff. What a clown show of incompetent idiots. Or… a skillful one over on the powers that be internally from someone who knew better but knew that they wouldn’t know … and did this to help us all
text=about them to damage their credibility when they tried to go public with their stories of being
text=Epstein also threatened harm to victims and helped release damaging stories
=attorneys' fees and case costs in litigation related to this conduct.
=Defendants also attempted to conceal their criminal sex trafficking and abuse
text=$327,497.48 and $6,487.04 in New York City
text=trafficking and abuse conduct.
text=destroy evidence relevant to ongoing court proceedings involving Defendants' criminal sex
text=Epstein also instructed one or more Epstein Enterprise participant-witnesses to
text=trafficked and sexually abused.
text=conduct by paying large sums of money to participant-witnesses, including by paying for their
Given recent high profile redaction events, I think one simple use of AI would be to have it redact documents according to an objective standard.
That should in theory prevent overly redacted documents for political purposes.
An approach that could be rolled out today would be redacting with human review, but showing what % of redactions the AI would have done, and also showing the prompt given to the AI to perform redactions.
I don't think the commentor above is saying that an AI should necessarily apply the redaction. Rather, an AI can serve as an objective-ish way of determining what should be redacted. This seems somewhat analogous to how (non-AI) models can we used to evaluate how gerrymandered a map is
Cool to see this here. It’s funny because we do so many huge, complex, multiyear projects at Free Law Project, but this is the most viral any of our work has ever gone!
Anyway, I made X-ray to analyze the millions of documents we have in CourtListener so that we can try to educate people about the issue.
The analysis was fun. We used S3 batch jobs, but we haven’t done the hard part of looking at the results and reporting them out. One day.
https://www.argeliuslabs.com/deep-research-on-pdf-redaction-...
> Information Leaking from Redaction Marks: Even when content is properly removed, the redaction marks themselves can leak some information if not done carefully. For example, if you have a black box exactly covering a word, the length of that black box gives a clue to the word’s length (and potentially its identity).
Does X-ray employ glyph spacing attacks and try to exploit font metric leaks?
No, we worked with researchers that developed that kind of system, but didn't broadcast our work b/c the research was too sensitive. Seems the cat is out the bag now though.
I think the combination of AI and font-metrics is going to be wild though. You ought to be able to make a system that can figure out likely words based on the unredacted ones and the redaction's size. I haven't seen any redaction system yet that protects against this.
I haven't gone through more than just 10% of the files released today, but noticed that at least EFTA00037069.pdf for example has a `/Prev` pointer, meaning the previous revision of the file is available inside of the PDF itself. In this case, the difference is minor, but I'm guessing if it's in one file, it could be more. You can run `qpdf --show-object=trailer EFTA00037069.pdf` on a PDF file to see for yourself if it's there.
I'm almost fully convinced that someone did this bad intentionally, together with the bad redactions, as surely people tasked with redacting a bunch of files receive some instructions on what to do/not to do?
Hmmm.. The more I think about this the more any font kerning is likely a major leak for redaction. Even if the boxes have randomness applied to them, the words around a blacked out area have exact positioning that constrains the text within so that only certain letter/space combinations could fit between them. With a little knowledge of the rendering algorithm and some educated guessing about the text a bruit force search may be able to do a very credible job of discovering the actual text. This isn't my field. Anyone out there that has actually worked on this problem?
You'd think the go-to workflow for releasing redacted PDFs would be to draw black rectangles and then rasterize to image-only PDFs :shrug:
As someone who's built an entire business on "anti-screenshots" this is brilliant.
PDF redaction fails are everywhere and it's usually because people don't understand that covering text with a black box doesn't actually remove the underlying data.
I see this constantly in compliance. People think they're protecting sensitive info but the original text is still there in the PDF structure.
Not to mention some PDF editors preserve previous edits in the PDF file itself, which people also seems unaware of. A bit more user friendly description of the feature without having to read the specification itself: https://developers.foxit.com/developer-hub/document/incremen...
often times you will have requirements that the documents you release be digitally searchable and so in these cases, this would not be an option
run some ocr on them after to recreate the text layer?
Shockingly, you can see redaction info from within your browser's PDF viewer. I am using Brave on Linux, and went here:
https://www.justice.gov/multimedia/Court%20Records/Matter%20...
As a test, select with your mouse the entire first line of paragraph number 90, and then paste it into a text editor or a shell. The unredacted text appears!
Adobe Pro, when used properly, will redact anything in a PDF permanently.
Whoever did these "bad" redactions doesn't even know how to use a PDF Editor.
We have paralegals and lawyers "mark for redaction", then review the documents, then "apply redactions". It's literally be done by thousands of lawyers/paralegals for decades. This is just someone not following the process and procedure, and making mistakes. It's actually quite amateurish. You should never, ever screw up redactions if you follow the proper process. Good on the X-ray project on trying to find errors.
I just want to add, applying black highlights on top of text is in fact, the "old" way of redaction, as it was common to do this, and then simply print the paper with the black bars, and send the paper as the final product.
Whoever did it is probably old, and may have done it thinking they were going to print it on paper afterwards!! Just guessing as to why someone would do this.
Or they may not understand how PDF works and think that it's the same as paper.
Especially with the "draw a black box over it" method, the text also stops being trivially mouse-selectable (even if CTRL+A might still work).
Another possibility is, of course, that whoever was responsible for this knew exactly what they were doing, but this way they can claim a honest mistake rather than intentionally leaking the data.
A while back I did a little work with a company that were meant to help us improve our security posture. I terminated the contract after they sent me documents in which they’d redacted their own AWS keys using this method.
> Or they may not understand how PDF works and think that it's the same as paper.
Yes; that's presumably included in being "amateurish" and "not following proper process".
Any attorney or law enforcement that works for the US Federal Government receives very, very comprehensive instructions on how to redact information on basically the first day of training. There is absolutely zero doubt among any of my DOGE'd friends that this was 100 percent on purpose malicious compliance.
The context for OP posting this is that many of the recently-released Epstein documents were PDFs "redacted" by being drawn on top of.
I wasn't sure of this, even though sometimes you'd see remains of the original characters near rectangles edges.. does this mean the leaked documents have been de-redacted ?
Yes, in some cases, eg. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46364121
oh that's a beautiful sight
hopefully this is straw that breaks the camel's back
Why would that be the case? The government isn't redacting "yes we contacted aliens" they're redacting information about military capabilities that might be of use to adversaries.
sorry the title mentioned epstein files, so i was hoping incriminating facts that would accelerate trump's fall
No reason to be sorry ... you are right and the other person seems quite confused about the context.
At least some, yes: https://daringfireball.net/linked/2025/12/23/trump-doj-pdf-r...
yeah i expected every political team, even the low level ones, to be fully aware of naive pdf "edition"... alas, incompetence often does that
Checks and balances for a more technological era.
Survival of the leetest
I'm actually surprised not to have yet heard widespread conspiracy theorization that this is deliberate for some inscrutable reason or other.
Something something "chess, not checkers, this proves he has them on the run!"
Also good for UFO/UAP/"anomalous phenomena" documents and remote viewing PDFs for what it's worth :)
Is there a good free tool to properly redact PDFs? My workflow is to place black annotation rectangles on top and then print as PDF with "force rasterization" on. The resulting PDF files then just consist of pages with one image each. But this tends to be really suboptimal, because it's usually a grayscale or color rasterization, so file sizes are very large vs. monochrome PDFs with CCITT G3/G4 compression (which is absolutely what you want for text content, excellent compression and lossless). Post-processing PDFs to convert them to CCITT is rather annoying and I only know of CLI ways.
Given that no U.S. or Israeli citizen apart from Epstein and Maxwell has experienced severe repercussions and Andrew Windsor is the perfect fall guy, there is the possibility that nothing will be revealed from these uncovered redactions.
The releases haven't yielded anything so far. For all we know, Epstein used other methods of communications for the really sensitive stuff. This would not be a surprise, since the whole Maxwell family was deep into tech (Magellan, Chiliad) and Ehud Barak was the head of Israeli military intelligence in the 1980s.
The story is going to be closed in a bipartisan manner except that it might be used to remove some unwanted politicians. The New York Times has already released an article that "explains" Epstein's wealth which names all figures that appear in "conspiracy theories" in an innocent way. Basically, they claim that Epstein could just steal from billionaires like Wexner and the billionaires would roll over and do nothing.
That is the official confirmation that all intelligence angles will be squashed in a bipartisan manner. For all we know, the "incompetence" in the redactions may be a way of saying: "See, we have nothing to hide."
Hilarious that DOJ didn’t flatten the layers so you can unredact stuff. What a clown show of incompetent idiots. Or… a skillful one over on the powers that be internally from someone who knew better but knew that they wouldn’t know … and did this to help us all
lol thanks bros
text=about them to damage their credibility when they tried to go public with their stories of being text=Epstein also threatened harm to victims and helped release damaging stories =attorneys' fees and case costs in litigation related to this conduct.
=Defendants also attempted to conceal their criminal sex trafficking and abuse
text=$327,497.48 and $6,487.04 in New York City text=trafficking and abuse conduct. text=destroy evidence relevant to ongoing court proceedings involving Defendants' criminal sex text=Epstein also instructed one or more Epstein Enterprise participant-witnesses to text=trafficked and sexually abused. text=conduct by paying large sums of money to participant-witnesses, including by paying for their
Given recent high profile redaction events, I think one simple use of AI would be to have it redact documents according to an objective standard.
That should in theory prevent overly redacted documents for political purposes.
An approach that could be rolled out today would be redacting with human review, but showing what % of redactions the AI would have done, and also showing the prompt given to the AI to perform redactions.
Honestly, it doesn't take any inference or need for AI, there's simply data in the documents that can be extracted.
I don't think the commentor above is saying that an AI should necessarily apply the redaction. Rather, an AI can serve as an objective-ish way of determining what should be redacted. This seems somewhat analogous to how (non-AI) models can we used to evaluate how gerrymandered a map is