Online news site Gawker has filed for bankruptcy after losing a $140m (£97m) privacy case earlier this year.
| Nick Denton founder of Gawker Media |
Gawker told staff it still planned to appeal against the ruling and would continue to operate, but it was now accepting offers to buy the site.
Publisher Ziff Davis, owner of PC magazine and Geek.com, has already made an offer to buy all of Gawker's assets for less than $100m. The website Recode has reported Gawker and its banker expect higher bids to come in once Gawker has bankruptcy protection.
Last year the company's founder Nick Denton estimated Gawker Media, which owns the sites Jezebel and Deadspin, was worth between $250m and $300m.
In its official filing Gawker said it had $50m to $100m in assets and between $100m and $500m in liabilities.
Hogan trial
Gawker was sued by Hulk Hogan, whose real is Terry Bollea, after the website published a video from 2007 of Mr Hogan having sex with the wife of a former friend.During the three-week trial Gawker defended its right to publish the video as part of its celebrity news coverage, while Mr Hogan argued it had been an invasion of his privacy.
The jury ruled in the former wrestler's favour and ordered Gawker to pay $115m in compensation and $25m in punitive damage. In May a judge denied Gawker's request for a new trial.
In an interview with the BBC earlier this month Mr Denton said he was confident that the original ruling would be overturned. "I'm confident that when this case comes before judges in a higher court that people will find again there is a place for critical journalism and it deserves to be protected.
"There are substantial protections for the free press in the United States and there's protection for criticism."
'Thicker skin'
In a twist revealed after the trial, Mr Hogan's legal bills were paid by PayPal co-founder and tech billionaire Peter Thiel.Mr Thiel, said he wanted to curb Gawker's "bullying". In 2007 Mr Thiel clashed with Gawker after the site published an article that outed him as gay.
Mr Denton told the BBC Mr Thiel should accept that his position means he should face public scrutiny.
"If you're a billionaire and you have power and access to the media, you should expect now and then to get the occasional critical piece," said Mr Denton.
"A wiser approach to getting angry and trying to sue a media company out of existence is to ... develop a thicker skin," he added.
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