I just got an iPhone 5 and am running on iOS 6. I had to wait for there to be money in my bank account before setting up an iTunes account, so I used my mother's until that time. I downloaded a few apps, just the basics like Facebook and Twitter, etc. Since then, money has been put in my account and I set up my own.
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Mar 27, 2018 - How to stop iCloud from asking you to repeatedly sign in on iPhone and iPad. Enter your password to disable Find My iPhone on your iPhone or iPad. If you use a separate Apple IDs for iCloud and iTunes/the App Store and you. He spends his time learning the ins and outs of iOS, always trying to find.
Everytime I go to download any apps, it asks me for my password as it usually does. It then asks me to set up three security questions (even though I already have set up one on the website). If I select continue, it asks for my password again and moves to a loading screen.
From there, it continually asks for my Apple ID password no matter how many times I enter it in and never goes past the loading screen.
I am able to download applications from the computer and have them automatically show up on the phone, but downloading from the phone itself seems near impossible at this point.
I'm becoming very frustrated as I've always wanted to be an Apple user and now that I finally am, I'm having more troubles than I ever did with any Android phones.
Help!
iPhone 5, iOS 6.0.1
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Published 5:10 PM EDT Jul 19, 2017
Q. Why do my Apple devices keep asking for my Apple ID password at random moments?
A. You can forgive Apple for an abundance of caution with your Apple ID — the universal login to such services as the App Store, iCloud, iTunes and FaceTime. But the seemingly random way this system can pop up a nag for your password can yield some head-scratching moments.
Rich Mogull, CEO of the cloud-security firm Securosis, outlined two possible causes. The first involves constant nags for your Apple ID and password, which he said often involve “a bad download of some sort” that gets the App Store stuck, though sometimes iCloud’s mail can lead to the same login loop.
In that situation, he advised — yes, you’ve heard this before — rebooting the stuck device.
The second, less frequent and less predictable password nag, Mogull said, looked to him like Apple watching for suspicious activity and then requesting new logins just in case.
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“I noticed an uptick in these kinds of requests a few years ago when iTunes fraud started becoming a bigger concern,” he wrote. He compared that to the way other fraud-management systems at banks will require a new login “if they detect some sort of unusual activity on your account.”
Joe Kissell, author of the book Take Control of iCloud, made a similar observation.
“I believe it’s not a matter of something going wrong, so much as Apple using some mysterious, inscrutable logic to determine when they should ask people for their passwords,” he wrote in an email. “I think it’s happening intentionally, just not for reasons ordinary mortals like us can discern.”
Apple declined comment.
In either case, this is a problem Apple needs to solve. And not just only because of the time it costs Apple’s users. A system that constantly asks users for their passwords in situations, such as an iOS device’s Settings app, that don’t allow the use of a password manager will encourage those users to choose the simplest, most easily-remembered password possible.
Apple’s rules — “a minimum of 8 characters, a number, an uppercase letter, and a lowercase letter” — are fairly strict, but cranky users are careless users and will seek the simplest way to meet them.
And if they don’t have two-factor authentication set up to protect their account, in which they confirm strange logins via one-time codes or push notifications to one of their devices, a password easy enough to enter constantly can also be easy to guess.
Considering all the hats an Apple ID must wear, from purchasing music at iTunes to helping you locate and, if necessary, remotely wipe a lost iPhone, that’s a serious risk. If you haven’t already enabled Apple’s two-factor authentication, please do that before you even think about any simplification of your password. It’s not hard to set up and, at least in my experience, it’s asked me to verify a login far less often than Apple has demanded my Apple ID password itself.
(There is one confusing wrinkle on devices running old versions of iOS that we’ve seen trip up Apple users: When you get that one-time code, you won’t see a separate dialog to enter it and instead you’re supposed to append those digits to your password, without a space in between.)
Rob Pegoraro is a tech writer based out of Washington, D.C. To submit a tech question, e-mail Rob at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/robpegoraro.
Published 5:10 PM EDT Jul 19, 2017