MacTalk
August 2024
Apple Explains How to Identify Social Engineering Attacks
In a notable update to a support document explaining how to recognize and avoid scams, Apple writes:
Social engineering is a type of targeted attack that relies on impersonation, deception, and manipulation to gain access to your personal data. In this attack, scammers will pretend to be representatives of a trusted company or entity over the phone or through other communication methods. They will often use sophisticated tactics to persuade you to hand over personal details such as sign-in credentials, security codes, and financial information.
The document, which first appeared in the Wayback Machine in late 2023, says nothing that will surprise security-savvy Apple users, but it’s an excellent summary you can share with those who are less aware of tech-related scams. It also brings together all the email addresses to which you can report scammers trying to impersonate Apple. The 4 July 2024 update adds a particularly helpful section on identifying social engineering attacks of all types.
Contents
- New Members
- What Should Apple Users Take Away from the CrowdStrike Debacle?
- Steve Jobs’s Predictions from the 1983 International Design Conference
- Don’t toss your Apple Watch away if you get a hard fall warning, like Steven Spielberg did
- How to brainstorm and mind-map in Freeform
- How Apple Intelligence Sets a New Bar for AI Security, Privacy, and Safety
- Apple Explains How to Identify Social Engineering Attacks
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