iOS users have been trained for years to enter their iCloud passwords in alerts that appear at random times & random appspic.twitter.com/QVFkYZ0GbD
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iOS users have been trained for years to enter their iCloud passwords in alerts that appear at random times & random appspic.twitter.com/QVFkYZ0GbD
How can you protect yourself? It's trickier than you might expectpic.twitter.com/A0XFcCl0fY
The problem is actually easy to fix: instead of asking for the password directly, iOS should tell the user to open the settings apppic.twitter.com/w7R8tqGXIc
The most shocking thing about this, is that it only took me about 15 minutes to build a perfect replica of the originalpic.twitter.com/iiMKLLHvA6
Even if you enable 2-factor auth and with the app review process, you can still be victim of a phishing attackpic.twitter.com/DTByji4IRT
I decided to not publish the source code, nor to submit the app into the App Store, instead please dupe the radar https://openradar.appspot.com/radar?id=4952345645416448 …
The ‘focus’ is the only different, but i guess... 
Nope, it's the same, it was just the timing of the screenshot ;)
Obviously, if the quotation marks are not smart, it‘s not an official Apple popup.
Haha, yeah, I don't like smart quotes
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