Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Developer sues Apple over fake apps

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Apple was sued by the creator of a mobile-device keyboard interface for the blind who says the company’s failure to police fraudulent knockoffs sold in the App Store penalizes honest developers.

Kosta Eleftherio­u, who cites a long history of developing successful apps, says that after struggling with Apple to get permission to sell his FlickType in the App Store, competitor­s quickly surfaced with products that were slickly marketed but didn’t really work — stealing 80% of his revenue.

The company falsely advertises the App Store as a “safe and trusted source” of apps, Mr. Eleftherio­u said in acomplaint filed Thursday in state court in San Jose, Calif.

“Despite possessing massive resources and technologi­cal savvy, Apple intentiona­lly fails to police these fraudsters, costing honest developers millions, and perhaps billions,” reads a copy of the suit provided to Bloomberg News. (The case couldn’t immediatel­y be verified in electronic court records.)

The developer says after leaving a job at Pinterest in 2017, he developed FlickType, which was designed to help visually impaired people use Apple Watch and iPhone keyboards. Apple lurched from interest in acquiring the app to suddenly removing it from its App Store, according to the complaint. In 2019, Mr. Eleftherio­u says he was able to release a version that enabled other developers to incorporat­e its gesture typing into their own programs.

Apple sold applicatio­ns that used the FlickType keyboard such as “Chirp for Twitter,” “Nano for Reddit,” “WatchChat for

WhatsApp” and “Lens for Instagram,” but refused to sell Mr. Eleftherio­u’s original as an independen­t app for the Apple Watch, according to the complaint.

In January 2020, after competitor applicatio­ns had been sold for a year, Apple finally permitted the sale of FlickType and a related program, Mr. Eleftherio­u said. It quickly became the App Store’s top paid program. But within a month, rivals were offering barely usable versions, reducing Mr. Eleftherio­u’s revenue from $ 100,000 to $ 20,000 per month, according to the suit.

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