We've all got plenty of questions for National Security Administration leaker Edward Snowden — and now is our chance to ask him directly.

Snowden will appear on The Guardian's website for a question-and-answer session with readers at 11 a.m. ET Monday, the newspaper announced on Twitter. The Guardian's Glenn Greenwald, a central figure in the outlet's NSA reporting, teased it as an "Ask Me Anything," a crowdsourced interview format popular on Reddit.

LIVE Q&A w/ Edward Snowden: NSA whistleblower answers your questions at 11am EST | 4pm BST http://t.co/UzrQRXst54 #AskSnowden — GuardianUS (@GuardianUS) June 17, 2013

BREAKING: Edward Snowden will appear today at the Guardian website, 11 am EST, for reader Q-and-A - ask him anything http://t.co/QrIRthRRZY — Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) June 17, 2013

SEE ALSO: Edward Snowden Wants 'People of Hong Kong' to Decide His Fate

The website for the interview cautions that Snowden will use a "secure Internet connection" to partake in the Q&A.

"It is possible that he will appear and disappear intermittently, so if it takes him a while to get through the questions, please be patient," the site reads.

Snowden fessed up as the source behind The Guardian and The Washington Post's recent reporting on NSA's surveillance programs. However, recent followup reports indicated that Snowden may have exaggerated the NSA's capabilities and the systems he was personally capable of accessing. Questions also remain over his choice of Hong Kong as a safe harbor — the U.S. and Hong Kong have shared an extradition treaty since 1998.

What will you ask Snowden? Share in the comments below.

Image courtesy The Guardian