Apple has a severe fire, as a company called Finto has filed a lawsuit against it, and it is about Apple Pay’s popular payment service.
The allegations are serious: According to Finto, Capetino has massive corporate mismanagement. The complaint is focused on the allegations that Apple misuse Finto’s mobile purse technology, describing these measures as theft and unusual blurring.
The litigation alleges that Apple had obtained secret trade secrets from Finto, Corfire, during several meetings in 2011 and 2012. In the meantime, Apple was under pressure to prepare a mobile payment solution, but there was a lack of internal capabilities to do so.
Finto claims that Apple contacted Corfire in an excuse for a business partnership. The debates allegedly included deep technical exchange, some of which included sensitive information that were uploaded to the file sharing platform maintained by Apple.
Apple fraudulently persuaded Corfire to enter the NDA, enabled Apple to access Corfire’s mobile purse technology and trade secrets. Apple then illegally exploited that by adding Apple’s salary features, access was only found in Corfire’s proprietary element and mobile purse technologies that were secured as a secret trade secret.
– ipwatchdog, Fintiv Representative for August 2025
After Corfire’s proprietary information, Apple allegedly ended the conversation – the final partnership was abolished – and instead used the knowledge acquired to make and launch Apple Pay in 2014.
Filing claims that Apple misled Corfire to sign the non-Information Agreement (NDA), after which he had access to and benefited Corfire’s safe element and mobile purse technologies-who was previously protective as trade secrets-without permission.
Finto also claims that Apple developed a network of partners, including credit card processors and banks, for profits from Apple Pay. The complaint argues that Apple hid a false statement of its unauthorized use of Corfire’s technology by promoting a false statement that it was the only developer for Apple Pay. Finto describes it as dishonest treatment, and if these allegations are confirmed in court, it will be a small thing.
The litigation also claims that Apple’s other companies have a history of misusing partnerships to access private technology. It points to similar conditions with Masimo and Valencel, Inc., which focuses on heart surveillance tools. In both examples, Finto says Apple started a partnership, but then used companies’ technologies in their products.
Mark Caswatez, the lead attorney of the firm Casvetz LLP, described Apple’s behavior as a very serious example of corporate wrongdoing, which he faced in his decades -long legal career.
We will keep an eye on this matter and continue to post you.
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