Total Downloads

2,591,036

Total Files

9,206

Latest Update

10

What to do when your two-step Apple ID account is locked

Posted June 21, 2018 | Mac


I woke up on a Friday morning, groggy with allergies, a mild cold, and a message on my iPhone. I needed to enter my password to proceed. I did so, but only after checking that it wasn’t some kind of phishing message—the message was generated on the home screen and using iOS, not in a browser or an app.

After entering my password, my iPhone said, “This Apple ID has been locked for security reasons.” I needed to go through an unlock process. I presume my account was locked because someone had attempted to lock in and had too many password failures.

IDG

Apple warns you when it’s locked your account.

That involved received a text on a trusted device and entering a Recovery Key, as this Apple ID account was still using Apple’s legacy two-step verification, a method they have since required everyone upgrade from—unless you’re using your Apple ID effectively only for purchases. If you ever log in with an Apple ID with two-step for iCloud use on an iOS device or a Mac, the account is automatically upgraded in High Sierra (macOS 10.13) and iOS 11 to the newer, more-robust two-factor authentication (2FA).

However, I was still living in the past for reasons that date back to Mac.com. At one point, it made some sense to have two separate accounts, and since that stopped being the case, Apple has provided no way to merge purchases, data, and other records.

My unlock efforts worked, and I resumed access to that account. That was in part because I’d done a reasonable amount of preparation in case this ever happened. But I decided afterwards I should migrate to eliminate this situation in the future.

(Bad logins are unfortunately also a way people may be harassed, with automated attempts to break in that let a malicious or criminal party deny someone access to their account. Apple seems to have ways to throttle and deal with this, however, because otherwise it would happen constantly to many users.)

How I prepped

Two-step verification. I preach the technogospel of setting up accounts to require a second factor for any services that offer it. This requires not just that someone obtain your password or guess it, but that they also possess access to one of your unlocked devices or can hijack your telephone number. Those aren’t trivial for the vast, vast majority of all account-grabbing attempts.

My iCloud account was already set to Apple’s 2FA, but my App Store-only account remained on two step. That’s still better than password-only account protection.



Source link

')
ankara escort çankaya escort çankaya escort escort bayan çankaya istanbul rus escort eryaman escort ankara escort kızılay escort istanbul escort ankara escort ankara escort escort ankara istanbul rus Escort atasehir Escort beylikduzu Escort Ankara Escort malatya Escort kuşadası Escort gaziantep Escort izmir Escort