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Three days later, on March 21, jurors tacked on another $25 million in punitive damages. In the courtroom, the foreman stood up and delivered a judicial body slam: a $115 million award in favor of Hogan.

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And Thiel was willing to spend millions to show that subjects of Gawker Media’s scrutiny could fight back and drive Denton out of business. Hogan sued in his hometown court in Florida, secretly backed along the way by PayPal (PYPL) cofounder Peter Thiel. But when Gawker’s namesake website in 2012 published a grainy sex video featuring Hogan, the self-proclaimed “gossip merchant” went a bridge too far. Over the years Denton had built his small but influential company, Gawker Media, on the backs of countless reports that needled Hollywood celebrities, professional athletes, and Silicon Valley entrepreneurs. They had a choice: side with Denton, an English entrepreneur–turned–New York blog baron, or Terry Bollea, the American wrestling icon known as Hulk Hogan. Nick Denton stared at the six jurors before him and prepared for the worst. At war with investor Peter Thiel, and facing bankruptcy, Denton may yet steal a page from Silicon Valley’s tax masters to have the last laugh. Can Tech’s Tattle Tycoon Trump Thiel? Gawker media founder Nick Denton used dotcom money to build one of the tech industry’s biggest critics.

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