Dotcom added that he doesn't trust Mega, a company he founded in 2013, now that the New Zealand government has control of the site. He claims a corrupt Chinese investor purchased enough shares in Mega to take over the company, but the New Zealand government recently seized all of the investor's shares, transferring control to itself.

"In addition Hollywood has seized all the Megashares in the family trust that was setup for my children," he says. "As a result of this and a number of other confidential issues I don't trust Mega anymore. I don't think your data is safe on Mega anymore." Of course, someone planning to launch a direct competitor to Mega would say something like that.

While his claims of a hostile takeover remain unverified, Dotcom plans to release a detailed breakdown of Mega's status next week, he said in a tweet today.

Update: To no one's surprise, Mega takes issue with Dotcom's allegations. It maintains that it's owned by 17 publicly disclosed investors, and that the majority of shareholders have supported recent equity issues -- there was no "hostile takeover" like Dotcom claims, according to the company. Mega is also keen to point out that Dotcom hasn't been a director since late 2013, and that the firm is either publishing or plans to publish source code. Supposedly, Dotcom is just trying to "spruik" (drum up attention for) his future business by making Mega look bad.