Tomorrow, controversial internet entrepreneur/Megaupload founder/aspiring rapper Kim Dotcom will unveil Mega, his new filesharing service. The launch coincides with the one-year anniversary of Dotcom's arrest and Megaupload's demise.

The Mega site boasts that the service will offer "easy privacy", an "online Mega manager", a "live global cloud file system," and "multi-centric data warehousing." On Twitter, Dotcom revealed that the site will offer free users 50 GB of storage. He also said that he is hoping to give former Megaupload users access to their old files, and that he and his lawyers are hoping to provide former premium users of Megaupload with premium status on Mega.

In an interview with The Guardian, Dotcom addressed concerns that Mega might face the same legal problems as its predecessor. "[W]hen people see what the site is capable of, when they understand the technology, they read the reviews, and people like it, they're going to try it, and hopefully over time feel comfortable using it for their personal data," he said. "The good thing here is that you can now be sure when you upload your files into the cloud that only you hold the keys – not the service provider, not anyone else outside the service provider, only you personally hold the keys. And what you do with that is your responsibility."

To say that Dotcom has a flair for the dramatic is a vast understatement, so tomorrow's launch -- which will take place at his New Zealand mansion -- is likely to be quite the event. Earlier this week, Dotcom hosted a decidedly Wonka-esque promotional event at a New Zealand ice cream parlor, where ten lucky fans found tickets to the launch at the bottom of their cups. Details about tomorrow's event remain mysterious, but he did Instagram (#ThinkBigDoBigger) a photo of the festival-size stage where it's all set to go down. The setting for a defiant performance of "John Banks"? Let us pray.

Just for fun, here's one of Kim Dotcom's rap videos: