The committee, along with other congressional committees and
special counsel Robert Mueller, is investigating possible links
between President Donald Trump's campaign and Russia.
Twitter's meeting with the committee comes amid mounting
pressure on regulators and Silicon Valley companies to open up
the opaque world of online political ads and to prevent
governments from using them to sway elections or attempt other
meddling.
Facebook said earlier this month that a Russia-based operation
spent $100,000 on thousands of ads on its social media platform
promoting 'divisive' messages before and after last year's
presidential election.
After Facebook's revelations, Democrats have urged the Federal
Election Commission to require transparency for social media
advertising.
Russia continues to deny meddling in the election, in which
Republican Donald Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)
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