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Apple Sued for Allegedly Stealing Tech to Build Apple Pay

Deepika Rana / Updated: Aug 08, 2025, 21:29 IST
Apple Sued for Allegedly Stealing Tech to Build Apple Pay

Tech Giant Faces Legal Battle Over Apple Pay’s Origins

Apple Inc. is facing fresh legal trouble as a new lawsuit alleges the company misappropriated proprietary technology to build its digital payment service, Apple Pay. The complaint, filed in a U.S. federal court, claims that Apple unlawfully accessed and exploited trade secrets belonging to a fintech firm that had been developing similar secure payment solutions years before Apple Pay’s 2014 debut.


The Plaintiff’s Claims

According to the lawsuit, the unnamed fintech company asserts it had shared sensitive technical data and design concepts with Apple under a non-disclosure agreement during early partnership discussions. The plaintiff claims Apple abruptly cut off negotiations, only to later launch Apple Pay with features strikingly similar to its patented security framework and tokenization methods.


Alleged Use of Proprietary Security Technology

Central to the case is the allegation that Apple utilized the fintech company’s proprietary authentication and encryption techniques—designed to prevent fraud and protect sensitive cardholder data. The plaintiff says these innovations were critical in shaping Apple Pay’s secure “tap-to-pay” model, which today processes billions in transactions annually.


Apple’s Response and Legal Stance

Apple has not yet issued a detailed statement regarding the lawsuit, but legal experts anticipate the tech giant will strongly deny the allegations, likely arguing that Apple Pay’s security architecture was independently developed. Industry analysts note that Apple has faced similar intellectual property disputes in the past, often resulting in lengthy court battles.


Potential Industry Impact

If the plaintiff prevails, the ruling could have significant implications for Apple’s payment business and broader mobile wallet technology. Legal damages could reach hundreds of millions of dollars, and a potential injunction might force changes to Apple Pay’s underlying systems. This case could also spark wider scrutiny over how Big Tech companies integrate innovations from smaller players.