Every January, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announces a personal challenge he will undertake in the year ahead. In 2016, he committed to running 365 miles before the year was up. In 2017, he milked cows and rode tractors as part of his resolution to meet more people outside the Silicon Valley bubble. Last January, he took a different tack. After a year in which Facebook was accused of amplifying fake news and allowing Russian trolls to deceive American voters in the run-up to the 2016 election, Zuckerberg decided that for his personal challenge in 2018, he would go ahead and fix Facebook.

He just might not have realized how much he'd be asked to fix.

As the months progressed, Facebook turned into a hydra, with new scandals sprouting almost weekly. Its stock price tanked, and internal morale plummeted. Twelve months later, Facebook has certainly changed, but it's hardly fixed. In 2018, the social giant juggled so many crises, you probably forgot half of them. Here's a refresher.

February 2018: Special counsel Robert Mueller's indictment of Russian trolls reveals the role Facebook played in Russia's plot---and so much more.

The Mueller indictment in February laid out exactly how 13 employees of Russia's Internet Research Agency created fake US personas on Instagram and Facebook to pit Americans against each other before the election. Facebook's only saving grace? Other tech giants like Twitter and YouTube were name-checked too.

Want more? Read all of WIRED’s year-end coverage

March 2018: The United Nations cites Facebook's role in the slaughter of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar

Of all of Facebook's crises, its problems in Myanmar have arguably had the most dire consequences. The company has been blamed for enabling the spread of fake news about Rohingya Muslims, who are being systematically slaughtered. Facebook has since kicked some of the worst offenders off the platform and updated its content policy that prohibits credible threats of violence to include misinformation that incites violence. The company also issued a report documenting its human rights failures in the country. But Facebook's global problems aren't limited to Myanmar. Following anti-Muslim violence in Sri Lanka, the country ordered internet providers and mobile phone carriers to shut down both Facebook and WhatsApp. Government officials in Papua New Guinea have considered the same.

March 2018: Cambridge Analytica story makes front page news

This was the big one. The New York Times and The Guardian/Observer dropped simultaneous bombshell reports about how the political data firm Cambridge Analytica misappropriated the data of tens of millions of Americans without their knowledge before the 2016 election. Facebook later said Cambridge Analytica accessed up to 87 million users' data. What's more, they weren't the only ones. Until 2015, Facebook gave developers broad access to user data, and the company has spent the past year trying to answer for where all that data went. Now the Federal Trade Commission, Congress, and international courts are also investigating. The UK's Information Commissioner, meanwhile, has fined Facebook for breaching the country's data protection law.

April 2018: Zuckerberg testifies before Congress

After the Cambridge Analytica story broke, Facebook's CEO was called to Washington to answer for his company's actions. For the most part, Zuckerberg walked away unscathed. The Senate primarily used its time to ask Zuckerberg for IT help, while House members accused Facebook of censoring conservatives like the pro-Trump personalities Diamond & Silk.

May 2018: House Democrats release thousands of Russian troll ads, leading to new revelations

The document dump unleashed a new wave of inquiry into the Russian activity. Among WIRED's findings: Russia-linked pages were targeting a sketchy music Chrome extension called FaceMusic at teenage girls. The Daily Beast later determined that the extension was infected with malware.