Nomi Health’s COVID-19 app was built on stolen software and broken promises, lawsuits claim

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A Nomi Health developer said the Utah company 'sesame streeted the development team' from Domo, providing a guided demonstration through a Texas company's proprietary app.

Both the hospital and Nomi resolved issues and came into compliance.

Redding had been given access to Nomi’s system, including internal communications and documents. In “Project Tiger” file folders, Redding found screenshots of OSGHD’s app alongside development files for Nomi’s own version, court documents said. Nomi’s licensing agreement said it was free to make its own application, but it could not base any part of it on OSGHD’s software, the lawsuit said. And Nomi’s licensing agreement prohibited it from giving outsiders access to OSGHD’s app, the lawsuit said, and limited who within Nomi could have access.

OSGHD “repeatedly failed to modify the application to comply with applicable requirements,” a Nomi counterclaim said. “Instead, OSGHD improperly attempts to extend the registration for its source code to vague generalities regarding the ‘look and feel’ and ‘layout’ of the application’s user interfaces — which are very similar to every other scheduling application used today,” Nomi’s counterclaim said.

 

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