Twitter and Google, which own other popular social media tools, also had similar experience of being encroached upon by Russia-backed groups that tried to influence the elections.
The US accused Russia of meddling in 2016 presidential election in which Donald Trump emerged victorious.
Top officials of the three companies are scheduled to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee later today during which they are likely to inform the lawmakers that the figures of Russian penetration in the American social media is much more than previously seen, said multiple media outlets having access to their testimonies.
"Russian agents intending to sow discord among American citizens disseminated inflammatory posts that reached 126 million users on Facebook, published more than 131,000 messages on Twitter and uploaded over 1,000 videos to Google's YouTube service," according to copies of prepared remarks from the companies that were obtained by The New York Times.
The new information goes far beyond what the companies have revealed in the past and underline the breadth of the Kremlin's efforts to lever open divisions in the US using American technology platforms, especially Facebook, the daily said.
This figure covers both search and display advertisements.
Google said it found 18 channels likely associated with this campaign that made videos publicly available, in English and with content that appeared to be political.
There were 1,108 such videos uploaded, representing 43 hours of content and totalling 309,000 US views from June 2015 to November 2016.
These videos generally had very low view counts; only around 3 per cent had more than 5,000 views. These channels have been suspended by Google.
It also found that 120 pages were created by the group to disseminate its advertisements and posts. The company had previously said that it found 470 total accounts linked to the Internet Research Agency.
Similarly, Twitter found as many as 2,752 accounts associated with Internet Research Agency.
"The new disclosures come as the tech industry is facing the threat of regulation. Tech companies are expected to face tough questions about their advertisements disclosure policy and their opposition to greater regulation," the journal said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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