Jun 22, 2015 08:50 AM EDT
Julian Assange, Wikileaks: Newly Released Sony Documents Reveal Embarrassing Hollywood Secrets

Sony Corp's woes continue as a new batch of over 276,000 classified documents has found its way onto Wikileaks servers. The new information dump contains numerous email correspondences, financial reports, personal calendars, and confidential files.

Internet users were first alerted to the new batch of documents when Wikileaks made an announcement via its official twitter page.

Gossip site Radar Online has already combed through some of the newly revealed documents and discovered this embarrassing find. The document in question is a "cold sore questionnaire" that Sony makes its actors answer for health insurance purposes.

The entire document can be viewed here courtesy of WikiLeaks:

1. I currently have a cold sore (describe cold sore locations):_______________

2. I have had the cold sore since:_____________

3. My last cold sore was approximately (date): ______________

4. I have had____cold sore breakouts over a period of _______ years.

 Radar reported that during the production of the Sony produced romantic comedy 'Aloha', one of the film's cast members was reported to be on medication for such sores. Their identity was kept confidential:

"[Redacted] has restrictions ..." an insurance agent told the studio about the actor, who was not one of the leads.

"The cold sore questionnaire says he uses Abbreva (which is not a prescription medication). If there is a prescription medication he takes, please have the cold sore questionnaire revised to show the prescription medication (also, artist would need to check the box on the cold sore questionnaire that says he'd take the prescription medication before & during filming as a preventative measure."

The leaks came on the eve of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange's third year anniversary under the care of The Ecuadorian Embassy in London. The controversial whistle blower has been living under their protection to avoid extradition for his activities.

After the first batch of Sony leaks Assange wrote: "This archive shows the inner workings of an influential multinational corporation. It is newsworthy and at the centre of a geo-political conflict. It belongs in the public domain. WikiLeaks will ensure it stays there."

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