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  • Geebo 9:00 am on January 13, 2026 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , icloud, , ,   

    Inside the Fake “Apple iCloud Investigator” Phone Scam 

    By Greg Collier

    A new phone scam is circulating that relies on shock, shame, and fake authority, and it’s designed to make people panic before they can think clearly.

    The call usually starts with someone claiming to be from Apple. They tell you that illegal and explicit material involving children has been found in your iCloud account. The accusation is deliberately extreme, meant to overwhelm you emotionally and put you on the defensive immediately.

    It’s a lie. And it’s a calculated one.

    What’s going on

    The caller insists that hackers placed illegal material into your iCloud storage without your knowledge. You’re told you’re not necessarily guilty, but you are in serious danger unless the issue is dealt with right now.

    That’s when the scammer positions themselves as your only way out.

    How the scam works

    Once fear takes hold, the caller offers a solution: they say they can remotely access your computer to locate and remove the illegal files. The service, they explain, will cost you several thousand dollars.

    Payment is typically demanded through Amazon gift cards. That alone should end the conversation. Gift cards are a preferred payment method for scammers because they’re difficult to trace and nearly impossible to recover.

    If you give them remote access, they aren’t fixing anything. Instead, they may install malware, steal personal information, or set you up for identity theft and future fraud.

    The fake authority angle

    To sound legitimate, callers often claim they work for Apple’s “Special Investigations Unit.”

    That unit does not exist.

    Even if your caller ID displays Apple’s name, don’t be fooled. Phone numbers can be spoofed to look authentic. A familiar name on your screen does not mean the call is real.

    Just as important: tech companies do not call people to accuse them of crimes or to demand money to “resolve” investigations. And law enforcement does not warn people by phone before taking action. If authorities believed illegal material was on your devices, they would show up in person with a warrant, not a payment request.

    Red Flags

    This scam checks multiple warning boxes at once:

    • An unsolicited call accusing you of a serious crime
    • Claims of secret or special investigative departments
    • Requests for remote access to your computer
    • Demands for payment via gift cards
    • Urgent pressure to act before you can verify anything

    Any one of these is suspicious. Together, they’re decisive.

    If You’ve Been Targeted

    Never give remote access to your computer to someone who contacts you unexpectedly. Legitimate tech support only happens when you initiate contact through official channels.

    If you receive a call like this, hang up immediately. Do not argue, explain, or try to prove your innocence. Then report the call to consumer protection agencies or your state attorney general.

    Final Thoughts

    This scam succeeds by weaponizing fear and stigma. The accusation is meant to silence you, rush you, and keep you from seeking outside confirmation.

    Remember: there is no “iCloud investigator,” no surprise phone call from Apple about crimes, and no legitimate situation that requires payment in gift cards.

    When a call begins with panic and ends with a demand for money, the conclusion is simple: it’s a scam.

    Further Reading

     
  • Geebo 9:19 am on March 11, 2021 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , icloud, , ,   

    Victim loses $15,000 in iCloud scam 

    By Greg Collier

    iCloud is Apple’s cloud storage service that it supplies to its users for free up to 5 GB of storage. If you’re not an Apple or iOS user, iCloud is akin to Google Drive, Microsoft’s One Drive, or Dropbox. A few years ago, iCloud made the headlines when a number of celebrities had the contents of their iCloud accounts leaked to the internet. So, in theory, iCloud accounts can be hacked. Scammers know this and use this fear as a way to trick their victims who may not be that technically savvy as one woman in Missouri recently discovered.

    The 86-year-old woman was expecting an important call from her daughter when she answered her phone. The person on the other line claimed that the woman’s iCloud account had been hacked along with 42 other iCloud users. The scammer then told the woman that she would need to buy gift cards in order to protect her data. Since the woman used iCloud frequently she complied. She ended up buying 29 $500 gift cards for Walmart. When store clerks asked her what all the gift cards were for, she was instructed by the scammers to tell the clerks that the cards were for her grandchildren. The scammers told her that she would be reimbursed, but instead she was out $14,500.

    Tech support scams and their variants have been around since the dawn of the internet and continue to find victims. However, these scams are easy to thwart. All you need to keep in mind is that none of the big tech companies are ever going to call you out of the blue. That includes Apple, Microsoft, Google, Facebook, and the like. The best way to keep your personal storage accounts safe is to use a password that is difficult to guess. Password managers are a great tool to assist you with this. It also helps if you don’t use the same password for multiple accounts. Again, this is where a password manager comes in handy.

    However, if someone calls you out of the blue to tell you that your account has been hacked or your computer has a virus, hang up on them. The tech companies will never call you and no one can remotely tell if you have a virus on your computer.

     
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