- Nov 27, 2016
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Hi, all. I just wanted to share this with as much people as possible. The more people get involved, the better.
As many of you have already seen, heard or (most probably) experienced at some point during the previous week, there is a lot of malicious spam going around. Basically, if you haven't received a Shared Photo Album invitation, you most probably have received an iCloud Calendar invitation. Not to mention all the "sexy time with your neighbor" and "software patch delivered" phishing mails that have been going around for quite some time.
Let me just say one thing. This is not a new problem. People have been receiving all of the above mentioned spams for many years now. It's just that there were never so many iCloud users affected before.
I've reached out to my family and friends, and from 9 people I have asked if they got any Calendar invitation in the last week or so, 7 of them actually did. 2 of them did not even know what they actually received and 4 of them simply dismissed the invitation by pressing "Decline".
This is something that cannot be ignored any longer. That's why I'm reaching out to the community. Let's do something, let's make a difference!
What needs to be done:
First of all, you need to go to iCloud and go to: Preferences > Advanced and choose Receive event invitations as: Email to [B]xxx@icloud.com[/B]. I know this did not work as expected to a lot of people and they simply started receiving the invitations to both the Calendar app and as an email (I am not one of those people), but this is a crucial step in the Apple Spam Week.
Now as soon as you receive an email with the invitation to one of those cool Ray-Ban sales (or something similar), you should forward it as an attachment to: abuse@icloud.com immediately. You can do this by going to the Mail app on your Mac and choosing Message > Forward as attachment from the menu bar. If you are not a Mac user, simply use the forward button from your mail client. At this point all we want to do is forward it, doesn't matter how we do that.
Also, check your spam folder whenever you can, and forward those spam messages as well. You know which ones. The ones with all those great nude pictures of your neighbor, or the ones that invite you to check out a girl for a "sexy time" and so on. Most of those come from the same place as these invites. Send those to the email above as well.
Third and final step: Go to Help us win this fight![/COLOR][/B]
Thanks!
As many of you have already seen, heard or (most probably) experienced at some point during the previous week, there is a lot of malicious spam going around. Basically, if you haven't received a Shared Photo Album invitation, you most probably have received an iCloud Calendar invitation. Not to mention all the "sexy time with your neighbor" and "software patch delivered" phishing mails that have been going around for quite some time.
Let me just say one thing. This is not a new problem. People have been receiving all of the above mentioned spams for many years now. It's just that there were never so many iCloud users affected before.
I've reached out to my family and friends, and from 9 people I have asked if they got any Calendar invitation in the last week or so, 7 of them actually did. 2 of them did not even know what they actually received and 4 of them simply dismissed the invitation by pressing "Decline".
This is something that cannot be ignored any longer. That's why I'm reaching out to the community. Let's do something, let's make a difference!
What needs to be done:
First of all, you need to go to iCloud and go to: Preferences > Advanced and choose Receive event invitations as: Email to [B]xxx@icloud.com[/B]. I know this did not work as expected to a lot of people and they simply started receiving the invitations to both the Calendar app and as an email (I am not one of those people), but this is a crucial step in the Apple Spam Week.
Now as soon as you receive an email with the invitation to one of those cool Ray-Ban sales (or something similar), you should forward it as an attachment to: abuse@icloud.com immediately. You can do this by going to the Mail app on your Mac and choosing Message > Forward as attachment from the menu bar. If you are not a Mac user, simply use the forward button from your mail client. At this point all we want to do is forward it, doesn't matter how we do that.
Also, check your spam folder whenever you can, and forward those spam messages as well. You know which ones. The ones with all those great nude pictures of your neighbor, or the ones that invite you to check out a girl for a "sexy time" and so on. Most of those come from the same place as these invites. Send those to the email above as well.
Third and final step: Go to Help us win this fight![/COLOR][/B]
Thanks!