It turns out that the collection of Sony Pictures documents that surfaced on Wikileaks in April was just the start of it. The site released even more documents from last fall’s hack of the Hollywood studio.

Back in April, Wikileaks published over 30,200 documents from the hack. But the new collection is even bigger.

According to Slash Gear, the new collection includes 276,394 files, including travel calendars, contact lists, expense reports over several years and lists of employees. All the documents are available through a search system, which was launched in April.

The FBI linked the hacking to a group called “Guardians of Peace,” which the government said was working for North Korea in response to the James Franco/Seth Rogen comedy The Internship. The leak had vast implications within Hollywood and even lead to Sony Pictures co-chairman Amy Pascal getting fired.

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal recently, Emma Stone - who recently starred in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and Aloha, both Sony movies - said that she ended up deleting thousands of her own emails in fear that her own accounts were hacked.

“I was getting all these emails and texts from people I didn’t know—‘Hi, I’m Joe from the U.K. I like your movies’—and I was so overwhelmed that I went to my in-box and I deleted all my emails. In about a 30-second span,” the actress said. “I hit ‘Select All’ and ‘Delete Forever,’ and thousands of emails, like six years of emails, are now gone forever. I was just so freaked out that someone was in there.”

image of Amy Pascal courtesy of Jennifer Graylock/INFphoto.com