Meet Firoz Khan (firozkhanuk1214@gmail.com), a guy who couldn’t build his own vision — so he stole ours.
Unpublished our original app: Snapverse Hijacked the domain: snapverse.glide.app Then rebranded it under a second fake name: pikshare.glide.app (PikShare)
What you see there isn’t innovation. It’s theft with a new name.
People like Firoz prove one thing: You can steal a product, but not a purpose.
To all creators: Be careful who you trust. To Firoz: You can’t run from what’s coming.
We’ll rise again. But you? You’ll always be remembered for stealing what you couldn’t create.
I’m sorry to hear about your app. Can you elaborate on how he hijacked it? Was he on the team for the glide builder? Did he have access to your account? because as far as I know, Glide is super secure!
Thanks for asking — I really appreciate your concern.
Yes, Firoz was a developer on our team with full editor access. The app was already published and running under our domain snapverse.glide.app.
He later unpublished it without permission, cloned it into his own Glide account, and republished it using our exact domain.
What’s worse — he modified the page into a fake “hacked” version, misleading users and harming our brand’s reputation.
After that, he cloned it again and published it under a new name, PikShare, at pikshare.glide.app.
So yes — Glide itself is secure. But this was a case of abusing trusted team access. We’ve now removed him, and we’ve sent a full report to Glide support for takedown and investigation.
Thanks again for caring — the support from people like you keeps us going while we rebuild the right way.