Talk about a data dump.
On Thursday, the House Democrats of the Judiciary Committee released a trove of Facebook ads that the Internet Research Agency -- implicated as the digital organization Russia utilized to promote propaganda and fake news on the internet -- published to "sow discord" in America. And the document cache is... enormous.
The ads posted between April 2015 and August 2017 amount about 8.8GB of data. That may not sound like a lot in 2018, where smartphones routinely have as much as 256GB of storage, but the documents are all simple PDFs. It takes a lot of PDFs of ads -- 3,519, to be precise -- to take up that much space.
SEE ALSO:These are the ads that Russia promoted on Facebook to fuel division during the 2016 electionThe PDF documents contain images of the ads as well as the ad's attending metadata. That data includes the body and date of the ad, but also who the IRA targeted the ad to, how much it spent on the ad, and the number of people each ad reached.

Credit: democrats-intelligence.house.gov
Credit: democrats-intelligence.house.govFacebook voluntarily handed over the trove of ads to Congress in September 2017. But that was only after special counsel Robert Mueller III obtained a search warrant for the FBI's investigation.
Congress revealed some of the ads during House Intelligence Committee hearings on Russian election meddling in November 2017, which showed that the ads specifically used issues like gun control and race to inflame Americans on both sides of the aisle.
Credit: democrats-intelligence.house.gov
Credit: democrats-intelligence.house.govFacebook also announced around the same time it had received over $100,000 from ads placed by Russia-linked accounts.
Congress now puts the number of Americans who saw Russia's "divisive" Facebook ads at 11.4 million. Additionally, the IRA created 470 Facebook pages, which produced over 80,000 pieces of organic content, seen by more than 126 million Americans.
The ads themselves and the ways they were deployed are infuriating. But the sheer volume gives an impression of just how pervasive this "hidden" presence was in our online lives.
TopicsFacebookPolitics
(责任编辑:知識)
Carlos Beltran made a very interesting hair choice
Steve Harvey does NOT want anyone coming into his dressing room
People are freaking out about the eyebrow wigs need to know what this
Joe Biden, president of ice cream, is finally getting his own flavor
What brands need to know about virtual realityPhotos show the Blue Cut fire blazing a path of destruction in California
A fast moving wildfire continued raging near San Bernadino, California, forcing the evacuation of at
...[详细]FaceApp changes old world art models from stoic to stoked
It's such an obvious idea, but it took a professional artist to think of it: use the FaceApp to give
...[详细]Steve Harvey does NOT want anyone coming into his dressing room
Steve Harvey's fed up with people coming into his dressing room.
。 Fed. Up.。Honestly, don't even try
...[详细]Bow Wow gets dragged by the internet for lying about his lavish lifestyle
It's one of the basic rules of the internet -- don't lie because you will inevitably be called out,
...[详细]Here's what 'Game of Thrones' actors get up to between takes
Warning: Contains some mild Season 6 spoilers right at the end (the video is spoiler-free).
。LONDON -
...[详细]Chinese mobile payment platform Alipay enters the US market
Look out, Apple Pay: Alipay, one of China's biggest mobile payment services, is coming to the United
...[详细]
Overwatch。League is getting its own developmental league for teams and players who are almost-but-no
...[详细]Lorry attempts to block car from using hard shoulder, fails to realise it's the police
Taking the law into your own hands is never a great idea -- especially when the person you're trying
...[详细]Tourist survives for month in frozen New Zealand wilderness after partner dies
A tourist from the Czech Republic, whose partner fell to his death, survived a harrowing month in th
...[详细]Lorry attempts to block car from using hard shoulder, fails to realise it's the police
Taking the law into your own hands is never a great idea -- especially when the person you're trying
...[详细]Singapore gets world's first driverless taxis

Emojipedia will let you track the popularity of your favorite emoji
