EBay and its online payment unit, PayPal Inc, on Thursday Inc and two executives
for stealing trade secrets related to mobile payment systems.
www.google.com/wallet
The two executives, Osama Bedier and Stephanie Tilenius,
were formerly with PayPal and led the launch on Thursday of Google's
own mobile payment system in partnership with MasterCard, Citigroup and phone company Sprint.
The suit highlights the growing battle by a wide range of companies from traditional finance
to Silicon Valley trying to take a major stake in what has been described as a $1 trillion
opportunity in mobile payments. The mobile phone is seen as the digital personal wallet of the future.
The eBay suit said Bedier worked for nine years at PayPal, most recently serving as vice
president of platform, mobile and new ventures. He joined Google on Jan. 24 this year.
Tilenius was at eBay from 2001 to October 2009 and served as a consultant to the
company until March 2010. The suit says Tilenius joined Google in February 2010
as vice president of e-commerce.
Bedier is accused in the suit of having "misappropriated PayPal trade secrets by disclosing
them within Google and to major retailers."
The suit accused Tilenius of recruiting Bedier, thereby breaking a contractual agreement with eBay.
It also claims Bedier attempted to recruit former colleagues still at PayPal.
Ebay said PayPal and Google worked closely together for three years until this year on developing a
commercial deal where PayPal would serve as a payment option for mobile application purchases on Google's Android phones.
It said Bedier was the senior PayPal executive leading
and finalizing negotiations with Google on Android during this period.
It also claimed Bedier transferred up-to-date versions of documents outlining PayPal's mobile payment
strategies to his non-PayPal computer just days before leaving PayPal for Google.
"By hiring Bedier, with his trade secret knowledge of PayPal's plans and understanding of
Google's weaknesses as viewed by the industry leader (PayPal), Google bought the most comprehensive
and sophisticated critique of its own problems available," the suit said.
Google spokesman Aaron Zamost said the company had not yet received a copy of the complaint would
not be able to comment until it has had a chance to review it.
Google and PayPal have done battle in the recent past in online payments via
computers with the launch of Google Checkout in 2006, but Checkout has had a
minimal impact on PayPal's market dominance.
The suit was filed at Superior Court of the State of California, county of Santa Clara, Case No: CV20l863.
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