“To the best of my knowledge, Vir did this to get NGL going.” “Vir used his friendship with Iconic Hearts founder Hunter Rice and his role as a consultant and developer for Iconic Hearts to misleadingly gather information about Iconic Hearts and the sendit apps,” the filing reads. Iconic Hearts alleges in the complaint filing that Vir used its access to confidential data and information about the Sendit apps to develop its own similar app, which became NGL.
The complaint alleges that Vir did not accept this offer and Vir’s website seems to confirm this as there is no mention of full-time employment at Iconic Hearts. For reference, NGL was launched on Novemas seen on the app website, which was seven months after Vir was offered a full-time position at Iconic Hearts. Sound familiar? The submission that was obtained from TechCrunchexplains that the first Sendit app is called sendit – get it now and was released in November 2018, while the second Sendit app is called sendit – Q&A on Instagram and was released on June 21, 2022.
SENDIT APP ANONYMOUS SOFTWARE
Raj Vir is a software developer who was hired by Iconic Hearts in September 2018 to help develop an app called Sendit, an anonymous Q&A app with Instagram integration. It was good clean fun that took millennials and zoomers back to the days of Formspring and “Like for a truth” posts on Facebook, but a complaint filed earlier this month in the Superior Court of California in Los Angeles County alleges not only that NGL might be ripped off by another app but also inadvertently reveals that these two apps trick their users into believing that they are really connecting with their friends. The app also had a feature that allowed the user to get clues into the identity of those who questioned them for a cheap $9.99 every week. NGL’s main appeal was that it offered integration with Instagram, allowing users to post a prompt (in the form of a link) for anonymous questions and answer them via their Instagram stories. Users could sign up for the app and receive anonymous questions via the inbox of the app. There was a time when netizens occupied wThat was once “Ask meanothing” and “Like for atRuth.“This Anonymous Confessions Trends have basically become NGL, the is an app where users receive anonymous questions from friends, but a recent lawsuit claims that may not be the case. NGL and Sendit users receive questions from the app impersonating their friends.