Proxycurl, the fast-growing data enrichment API known for transforming LinkedIn profiles into structured datasets, has abruptly shut down after LinkedIn and its parent company, Microsoft, filed a sweeping lawsuit. The case, announced in January 2025, alleged that Proxycurl operated “hundreds of thousands” of fake accounts to collect personal and professional information on millions of users. While the company insisted it only scraped publicly available data, the legal risk proved insurmountable. By the time its closed shop, Proxycurl had amassed an impressive $10 million in annual recurring revenue, a figure that made it one of the most commercially successful scrapers in the sector—and, in the end, a prime target.
Proxycurl’s closure underscores a reality that many web-scraping companies have learned the hard way: even when operating in what courts have sometimes affirmed as a legal gray zone, the threat of litigation from deep-pocketed incumbents can be existential. The American legal system’s “loser pays their own costs” structure all but guarantees that even a strong defense becomes financially ruinous for smaller firms without substantial reserves or venture backing. Proxycurl’s founder, Steven Goh, was candid in a final post, explaining that the company had grown organically, without VC funding, and simply could not weather the prolonged pressure of defending itself against a multi-billion dollar corporation intent on making an example of it.
