This is a Complaint pleading for use in litigation of the title matter. Adapt this form to comply with your facts and circumstances, and with your specific state law. Not recommended for use by non-attorneys.
This is a Complaint pleading for use in litigation of the title matter. Adapt this form to comply with your facts and circumstances, and with your specific state law. Not recommended for use by non-attorneys.
If you can't sign in, reset your password, or receive verification codes, you can request account recovery to regain access to your account. Account recovery might take a few days or longer, depending on the specific account information you can provide to verify your identity.
"Apple may at any time, under certain circumstances and without prior notice, immediately terminate or suspend all or a portion of your Account and/or access to the Service.
Please call 1-800-MY-APPLE and speak to an Apple Specialist for more information.
Make sure your Apple ID is secure Only you should have access to your Apple ID. Anyone who has it can take over your Apple devices, view all content in iCloud, make purchases in the App Store or iTunes Store, and even use the “Find My” app to locate you and your devices.
Please reach out directly to Apple/iTunes, Microsoft (Windows App or Xbox), PlayStation, Meta Quest or Amazon to request a refund for any unauthorized purchases through their services. Links to their sites are listed below: Apple/iTunes Refund.
This is an authentic notification. It is informing the user that there has been another device set up using the same Apple ID. It sends an alert to all other devices, to approve your ID being used on the new device.
5. Check your Apple ID device list and remove unrecognized devices On an Apple device: Open the “Settings” app, click or tap on your name, and scroll to the bottom to see a list of devices on which you're signed in. On a Windows PC: Open iCloud for Windows > Manage Apple ID to see registered devices.
When you sign in to your Apple Account for the first time on a new device or the web, you'll receive a notification on your trusted devices that someone is trying to sign in with your account. The notification might include a map of the approximate location of the sign-in attempt.
Apple does this to make sure it is you signing into your account and protect your privacy and security when there have been changes, or when it has been a while since you last logged in.
What are you doing when you see this? The situation you describe can happen if there are apps (or media purchases) on the device that were installed (or downloaded) under a different Apple ID/account, and they need updating or redownloading.