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How Stolen Device Protection in iOS 17.3 keeps your iPhone safe

mardi 30 janvier 2024, 14:12 , par Mac Central
Macworld

Apple’s iOS 17.3 update brings a couple of new overdue iOS 17 features including collaborative playlists in Apple Music and AirPlay for hotel TVs, and some important security patches, but the biggest feature is a new one. It’s called Stolen Device Protection and it’s means to keep your iPhone safe if it falls into the wrong hands.

The basic idea is simple: With Stolen Device Protection activated, your iPhone will require biometric identification (Face ID or Touch ID) to perform many actions—your iPhone passcode will no longer serve as a fallback for most of them. In addition, some of the most sensitive operations (like changing your Apple ID password) will require a one-hour wait followed by an additional biometric authentication. That delay won’t apply when the phone is at a familiar location like your home or work.

How to enable Stolen Device Protection

Enabling or disabling this feature is easy. Just open Settings, tap Face ID & Passcode (it might say Touch ID & Passcode), scroll down to find Stolen Device Protection and turn it on.

Foundry

How Stolen Device Protection works

When you have Stolen Device Protection disabled, your iPhone’s six-digit passkey can be used to do all sorts of things, like change your Apple ID password, create a recovery key, turn off lost mode, transfer settings to a new device, disable Find My, access your saved Keychain passwords, and more.

This is a big problem. If a would-be thief watches you enter your passcode, they can steal your iPhone and effectively lock you out of it. With your passcode they can turn off Find My so you can’t find them, lock you out of your Apple ID so you can’t use iCloud to disable your phone, and log into all sorts of accounts for which you have your password saved.

When you enable the feature, your iPhone passcode will no longer work as a fallback for biometric authentication for some features. You’ll have to use Face ID or Touch ID to perform the following actions:

Access iCloud Keychain passwords

Apply for a new Apple Card

Erase all content and settings

Turn off Lost Mode

Sending people money with Apple Cash

Use your iPhone to set up a new device

Use payment methods saved in Safari

That’s not all. Some of the most sensitive and important operations will require Face ID or Touch ID authentication, followed by a one-hour delay, then another Face ID or Touch ID authentication. The one-hour delay and re-authentication would not apply if your iPhone is at a trusted location like your home or work, but you still need more than your passcode to perform the following actions:

Change your Apple ID password

Enable recovery key

Change your trusted phone number or contact

Add Face ID or Touch ID

Remove Face ID or Touch ID

Disable Find My

Turn off Stolen Device Protection

Bear in mind that this new feature does not prevent a thief from unlocking your iPhone, and it could still access any app that isn’t protected by a password. The thief could also open your email, which means that any account whose password could be reset with just a confirmation email is vulnerable.

It’s not a foolproof way to stop iPhone thieves from messing with your life. But it makes it a lot harder to get away with it, especially since it prevents them from locking you out of your Apple ID or disabling Find My–it will be much easier to locate or at least remotely erase.

iOS
https://www.macworld.com/article/2169903/how-to-stolen-device-protection-enable-biometric-authentica...

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