Convoy, the Seattle-based, Jeff Bezos-backed freight brokerage that shut down last week, is in talks to sell its technology to another logistics startup, San Francisco-based Flexport, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday morning.

The deal would provide Flexport with Convoy’s technology as well as a “small team of business, product and tech experts” from the Seattle firm, which canceled all orders and laid off workers last week, the Journal reported, citing someone it said was familiar with the negotiations the deal.

There were no financial details offered about the deal, which reportedly would not include any trucking equipment, real estate or other physical assets, nor would Flexport assume any of Convoy’s debts, according to The Journal.

If the deal goes through, Flexport intends to offer logistic services to Convoy’s former customers and partners, the Journal reported.

In a memo last week to employees, then-CEO Dan Lewis blamed the company’s sudden collapse in part on the broader downturn in the freight industry, which has cut demand for the brokerage services Convoy had offered.

But Lewis also suggested that investor concerns about the downturn had torpedoed earlier efforts to find a buyer for Convoy and keep the company intact.

On Tuesday, a former Convoy employee told The Seattle Times that another buyer had been found, but declined to identify the buyer.

The Times reached out to Convoy and to Flexport to confirm the sale but had not received responses Friday morning.

This is a developing story and will be updated.