News

Cloud Calendar invites are being abused to send callback phishing emails disguised as purchase notifications directly from ...
Bad actors are also abusing Calendar invites to send phishing emails that look like PayPal purchase notifications—and because the messages come from Apple's mail server, they can slip past security ...
Spammers send calendar invitations containing links, most of them taking the form of cryptocurrency scams. Several of us at ...
If you receive an unsolicited email that appears to come from Docusign, don't trust it without verifying its origin first.
A new attack uses what looks like legitimate iCloud Calendar invites but they're actually phishing emails in disguise designed to trick Apple users.
Scammers use fake DocuSign emails claiming Apple Pay charges to steal personal information using fraudulent phone numbers and ...
The email had a link that says, "unlock account." Apple confirmed that the email is a phishing scam. When receiving emails like this, check the sender.
Threat actors are abusing Apple’s iCloud Calendar feature to distribute phishing emails that appear to originate directly from Apple’s servers. Perpetrators are exploiting this feature to make ...
They socially engineer their phishing emails and messages so well that even the most tech-savvy users have to think twice. One example is the "Apple ID Suspended" phishing scam.
Apple wants to help you fight the forces of spam, by improving the use of disposable e-mail addresses. A patent named " Disposable Email Address Generation and Mapping to a Regular Email Account ...
Apple’s adoption to a higher DMARC standard has caused emails sent from an Apple email address to end up being flagged as spam in Gmail, according to reports in MacRumors and the Mac Observer.