Home Money Tech moguls pay tribute to ‘visionary’ Mike Lynch

Tech moguls pay tribute to ‘visionary’ Mike Lynch

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Tech entrepreneurs last night paid tribute to Mike Lynch, who died after his superyacht sank in Italy
  • Friends and industry colleagues mourned the loss of an “inspiring titan”

Tech entrepreneurs last night paid tribute to Mike Lynch, who died after his superyacht sank off Italy.

Friends and industry colleagues have mourned the loss of an “inspirational titan” who was known as the “British Bill Gates” after divers confirmed his body was found in the wreck of the Bayesian.

The body of Lynch’s 18-year-old daughter Hannah was also found on the boat off the coast of Sicily, as were two other people who had not been identified by last night.

Tech entrepreneurs last night paid tribute to Mike Lynch, who died after his superyacht sank in Italy

Two months ago, Lynch, 59, won a 13-year legal battle to clear his name after being accused of fraud.

Brent Hoberman, founder of online travel shop Lastminute.com, last night paid tribute to his friend of 28 years.

He said: “He was an iconic figure for so many decades for UK business.”

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The software billionaire’s story of triumph and controversy

Mike Lynch is one of the best-known names in British technology.

He was born in Ilford, east London, in 1965 to a family of Irish immigrants.

He was a brilliant student and won a scholarship to the private secondary school, Bancroft’s.

He then obtained a place at Cambridge University to study natural sciences.

In 1996 he founded Autonomy, a company that used complex analytics to help businesses manage their data.

The company made its public debut on the New York Stock Exchange in May 2000.

Six months later, Autonomy was listed on the London Stock Exchange. In 2011, Autonomy was sold for £9bn to US giant Hewlett Packard, in what was then the largest technology acquisition of a FTSE 100 company.

Lynch said the deal “would be a positive thing for Cambridge and the UK”.

But HP accused the Autonomy team of misleading it about financial details.

This would trigger a legal dispute.

After the sale, Lynch launched venture capital firm Invoke.

One of the first investments was the cybersecurity company Darktrace.

Lynch and his wife Angela Bacares owned just under 7 per cent of the company. This year, the firm agreed to be acquired by US private equity firm Thoma Bravo, putting Lynch and Bacares in prime position to receive £290m.

“He was an inspiring titan of technology and a pioneer for many who followed him,” Hoberman said.

“He was a true patriot” who supported UK tech entrepreneurs, he added.

Russ Shaw, founder of Tech London Advocates, said Lynch would be remembered as a “true visionary”. And Rob Moffat, a partner at venture capital firm Balderton Capital, said it was “a tragic day”.

“He has inspired a lot of tech entrepreneurs,” Moffat said.

Lynch founded software company Autonomy in 1996 before selling it to US computing giant Hewlett-Packard (HP) for £9bn in 2011.

But the deal fell apart when HP accused Lynch of falsely inflating Autonomy’s revenue before the sale.

That set off a lengthy legal saga that led to Lynch being extradited to the United States in 2022 to face criminal charges that could see him spend two decades in prison if convicted.

But a jury acquitted him of fraud charges in June and after his acquittal, he said he was ready to “get back to doing what I love to do, which is innovate.”

The yacht trip had been planned as a celebration after the case, but in the early hours of Monday, a tornado caused the boat to sink within minutes.

Eileen Burbidge, founder of Passion Capital, said it was a “shocking tragedy and the same for Stephen Chamberlain”, Lynch’s co-defendant in the US trial, who died after being hit by a car at the weekend.

Lynch’s wife Angela Bacares was rescued but guests yet to be formally identified last night included Morgan Stanley boss Jonathan Bloomer, his wife Judy and American couple Chris and Neda Morvillo.

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