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Peter Thiel is the one behind Hulk Hogan's Gawker lawsuit

The tech billionaire told the New York Times 'this is not the only one.'

Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for New York Times

Confirming rumors that had grown over the past few days, Paypal cofounder Peter Thiel admitted to the New York Times that he is financing Hulk Hogan's lawsuit against Gawker Media. Its Gawker blog published an article in 2007 titled "Peter Thiel is totally gay, people" (before later publicizing the sexuality of Apple CEO Tim Cook, and a Conde Nast exec) which kicked off this whole revenge-by-proxy legal saga. Hogan's involvement comes after the site posted a video of the wrestler (real name: Terry Bollea) having sex with the wife of a friend, clipped from a tape with other interesting details. He sued the site and won a $140 million award, which Gawker is appealing.

As detailed by the Times and in earlier reports, Hogan first tipped the possibility of a backer when he avoided making a claim that would have let the news site's insurance company help out with its defense and any potential damages. Until now however, that was just speculation, before a report by Forbes named Thiel as the figure funding the suit -- at an expense of around $10 million so far.

Since cofounding Paypal, Thiel has been an influential figure in the tech industry, funding companies from Facebook to Airbnb. Now, among other pursuits including the well-known Thiel Fellowship, he's focused on what he calls a "singularly terrible bully." What will happen to the case and the damage award remains to be seen, although Gawker just had a motion for a new trial denied earlier today. He also confirmed it's not the only case he's doing this for, so if it doesn't shut the network down, there's always another.

Now that his identity and involvement are confirmed, the question of whether or not it's ethical to personally finance an extended war against a media outlet (no matter how distasteful or even damaging its content is) hangs over the revelation. I will offer my personal opinion in greater detail after I run it by Peter Thiel -- I'm not scared or taking a cue from Wired, I just don't want to wait ten years to find out I'm on a target list.