million files in that one. and then the pandora papers is 14 different offshore law firms. - and we all worked on it together with an organisation _ in washington called the icij, l who received the data and then shared it out to hundreds - ofjournalists all around the world and we all published together. and margot gibbs is an investigative reporter for the aptly named international consortium of investigativejournalists. she is one of the 600 journalists around the world who've been working on those pandora papers. let's kick off with you, margot. what happens first? because you had over 11 million financial records to choose from. so, how did you set about this? so, i think it starts with a massive data crunch from icij's data team. so, we have all of the files stored on some server somewhere, don't know where, or many servers presumably. and i think there's kind of a months—long process of machine reading those files so that we as journalists can then go and quiz the files essentially and give them our hypotheses.