SAN FRANCISCO/NEW YORK — Uber Technologies Inc plans to move ahead with a deal to bring in Japanese technology company SoftBank Group Corp (SFTBY.PK) as a major investor by disclosing the pricing early next week in formal tender offers to the ride-hailing service's investors, two people familiar with the plans said on Friday.

The start of the tender follows Uber's disclosure on Tuesday that it covered up a 2016 data breach which compromised data of some 57 million customers and drivers. That revelation prompted governments around the world to launch probes into the breach and Uber's handling of the matter.

The people familiar with the plans did not say how much investors would be offered for the shares, or say if the price had been cut do to the breach or governments' response to the disclosure.

Investors will have 20 business days, or about a month, to respond, said one of the sources, who declined to be named because they were not authorized to discuss terms before they are public.

SoftBank and Dragoneer Investment Group agreed on Nov. 12 to lead a group that would invest as much as US$10 billion in Uber, people familiar with the deal previously told Reuters.

They plan to directly invest US$1 billion to US$1.25 billion in Uber, then buy as much as 17 per cent of shares held by existing investors and employees.

Selling shareholders must be accredited investors as defined by U.S. regulations and hold at least 10,000 shares of the firm,Uber said in ads published Wednesday in the New York Times andWall Street Journal.

Uber is valued at US$68 billion, the highest of any venture backed company.

SoftBank's US$1 billion direct investment in Uber is expected to be at the same valuation.

Employees and existing investors will be paid a lower price for their shares in a tender that will likely take weeks to complete, people familiar with the Nov. 12 agreement told Reuters.