Wikileaks founder Julian Assange speaks to the media inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London June 14, 2013.
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange speaks to the media inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London June 14, 2013. Talks between Britain and Ecuador ended with no breakthrough over Julian Assange, the British Foreign Office said on Monday, nearly a year after the WikiLeaks founder fled to the Ecuadorean embassy in London to avoid extradition to Sweden. Picture taken June 14, 2013. REUTERS/Anthony Devlin/Pool

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks founder, said that his "whistleblowing website" is poised to release a fourth series of classified documents. The leak is being prepared, he told the Lisbon and Estoril Film Festival (LEFFEST) on Sunday, according to teleSUR.

However, he has not exposed or given further details about the publication. What would be the subject of the leaks, and what would be the date of release is also something that someone else is in charge of, he said. Assange is still residing in the South American state's London embassy, where he sought political asylum in June 2012, so that he could avoid extradition. He is not ready to travel to Sweden, as the authorities want to question him regarding charges of rape as well as sexual molestation, even though he has not been accused of anything. The Australian activist feels that the US government will seek his extradition for publishing "thousands of classified diplomatic cables and military secrets" if he goes to Sweden.

Assange has been courageous but also fears reprisal. Earlier, in March, he was asked during a Skype conference whether he felt fear. Assange said that he did, like any "normal" person. "Only a fool has no fear. Courage is seeing fear and proceeding anyway," he said, according to foxnews.

The latest Spy Files, which were released by WikiLeaks in 2013, included 250 documents from over 90 surveillance companies, showing how widespread the secret, global mass surveillance industry has become. WikiLeaks' Spy Files #3 is also part of the ongoing commitment to throw light on the secretive mass surveillance industry. It doubles the Spy Files database, according to the press release for the leak.

In October, Assange had called Google, the search engine giant and its chairman Eric Schmidt "big and bad." He is quoted in an upcoming book titled "When Google Met WikiLeaks," that has been published in Newsweek, in which Assange charged Google's worldwide "domination of the internet" and "mass harvesting of data" to be a source of worry, even as nobody wanted to agree. As CEO, Schmidt saw Google collaborate with U.S. power structures and foray into a geographically invasive megacorporation."

Meanwhile, the BBC is working on a comedy series called Asylum, based on his refuge at the Ecuadorean embassy. It is "a satirical comedy about a government whistleblower and a millionaire internet entrepreneur trapped together in a London embassy." It will be released next year, according to rtnews.com.