Apple ID Renamed to Apple Account in Latest Operating System Releases
Apple has renamed Apple ID to Apple Account everywhere as of macOS 15 Sequoia, iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and watchOS 11. Nothing has changed functionally, but keep it in mind when reading tech articles or support documentation.
In macOS 15 Sequoia, iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and watchOS 11, Apple has officially renamed Apple ID to Apple Account. The new name is a slightly more sensible term because you can sign in to an Apple Account that holds your information, whereas an Apple ID was primarily an identifierāitās an email addressāthat didnāt inherently imply that it stored data. The name change is mostly a distinction without a difference, but you should be aware of it when reading support documentation or tech articles. Youāll see the new term in System Settings on the Mac and Settings on the iPhone and iPad.
(Featured image based on an original by iStock.com/Armastas)
Set macOS to Require a Password after Screen Saver Start or Display Sleep
Donāt forget about local security on your Mac. Make sure to require a password shortly after the screen saver starts or the display sleeps to prevent people from riffling through your email, photos, messages, and more.
Although paying attention to online security is of primary importance, donāt forget local security. You donāt want to go out for lunch and let someone wandering by your office poke through your email, messages, photos, and private files. To ensure this doesnāt happen, set your Mac to start the screen saver or sleep the display after a few minutes (on a laptop, just close the lid), and then set āRequire password after screen saver begins or display is turned offā to a short duration. We recommend 1 or 5 minutes, though you can adjust to balance inconvenience against security. To eliminate the fuss almost entirely, use Touch ID or an Apple Watch to unlock your Mac without having to type your password.
(Featured image based on an original by iStock.com/Armastas)
No More Ransom Website Offers Ransomware Decryption Tools
Ransomware primarily affects Windows and Linux computers, but if you, or anyone you know, falls prey to it, visit the No More Ransom website for advice and decryption tools.
Weāve written in the past about how Apple-only companies can protect themselves from ransomware (strong security, isolated backups, monitoring software), but realistically, itās primarily a threat to computers running Windows and Linux. If you, or anyone you know, is targeted by ransomware, look to the No More Ransom website, developed by Europolās European Cybercrime Centre and the Dutch police, for advice and tools. The advice boils down to: āDonāt pay the ransom because it proves to the criminals that ransomware works, and thereās no guarantee it will solve your problem.ā On the tools side, the Crypto Sheriff helps identify the type of ransomware in play, and No More Ransom provides decryption tools for 180 different forms and variants of ransomware. There are no guarantees, but anyone who has fallen prey to ransomware should start with No More Ransom.
(Featured image based on original by iStock.com/Suebsiri)
Energy Saver Can Shut Down Your UPS-Equipped Mac in a Power Outage
If you connect your Mac to your UPS with a USB cable, you can use Energy Saver to shut your Mac down automatically in the event of a power failure⦠before the UPS battery runs out.
An uninterruptible power supply, or UPS, provides essential protection from power surges, spikes, brownouts, and outages. But if youāre not at your Mac when the power goes out, the UPS may run out of battery before you (or the power) return. Happily, if you connect your Mac to your UPS with a USB cable, macOS can detect the outage and shut your Mac down safely, regardless of what else is happening. Make sure open documents are saved whenever you step away from your Mac, or you could lose changes. In System Settings > Energy Saver > UPS Options, you can trigger the shutdown in three ways: after using the UPS battery for a specified amount of time, when the time remaining on the UPS battery hits a specific number, or when the UPS battery level drops below a particular percentage. Thereās no harm in setting all three. Remember that it can take a minute or two for your Mac to shut down, so err on the short side for safetyās sake. Apple supports most UPS models from major manufacturers such as APC, CyberPower, and Tripp Lite.
(Featured image by Adam Engst)
Protect Domains That Donāt Send Email from Email Spoofing
If you have parked domains that never send email, itās important to set up SPF, DKIM, and DMARC so scammers canāt forge legitimate-looking email from those domains.
We recently wrote an article for those who manage their own Internet domain names about using SPF, DKIM, and DMARC to prevent your domains from being used in phishing attacks and enhance the deliverability of legitimate email. But what about other domains you own but donāt use for email? To make phishing attacks more believable, spammers sometimes forge email so it appears to come from parked domains that arenāt protected. You can use SPF, DKIM, and DMARC to ensure that forged email that seems to come from your unused domains isnāt accepted. The details are too specific to go into here, but Cloudflare has an excellent article outlining what you need to do.
(Featured image based on an original by iStock.com/Igor Kutyaev)
Missed an Alert? Check Notification Center
If a temporary banner disappears from your iPhone, iPad, or Mac before you have a chance to read it, you can find it in Notification Center.
iOS, iPadOS, and macOS all let you specify whether any given app should show no notifications, temporary banners, or persistent alerts: look in Settings > Notifications and System Settings > Notifications. Temporary banners appear briefly and then automatically disappear, which is appropriate for notifications requiring no acknowledgment. But what if you see a temporary banner only as itās disappearing and canāt read it in time? You can find a historical list of notifications in Notification Center. To open it from the Lock Screen on an iPhone or iPad, swipe up from the middle of the screen. From any other screen, swipe down from the center of the top of the screen. On the Mac, click the date and time in the upper right corner. If your Mac has a trackpad, you can also swipe with two fingers from the right edge.
(Featured image based on an original by iStock.com/Shutthiphong Chandaeng)
Having Trouble with a Public Wi-Fi Networkās Captive Portal Login Page?
When you connect to a public Wi-Fi network, you often must authenticate or agree to terms on a captive portal login page. Hereās the solution if that page doesnāt appear.
When you connect to a public Wi-Fi network at an airport, hotel, coffee shop, or school, you may need to interact with a captive portal login page to be granted access to the network. It might require you to enter login credentials, ask for your name, or make you agree to terms of service. But what if that login page doesnāt appear, or something kicks you off the network and you canāt reconnect? In Safari, navigate to captive.apple.com, which should force the captive portal to display its login page again. If that doesnāt work, remove any custom DNS servers and restart. On the Mac, find custom DNS servers in System Settings > Network > Wi-Fi > Details > DNS. On an iPhone or iPad, go to Settings > Wi-Fi > Network Name > Configure DNS and choose Automatic.
(Featured image based on an original by iStock.com/CreativaImages)
Be Careful When Scanning Unknown QR Codes
QR codesāthose blocky squares you scan with your iPhone cameraāare an easy way to open a Web page. Unfortunately, scammers also use them to trick people into visiting malicious websites, so read our tip about scanning these codes safely.
QR codes, those square, blocky codes you scan with your iPhoneās camera to load a Web page, have become ubiquitous. So much so that we seldom pause before scanning any QR code we see. But if you think about it, thatās the same as clicking random links in emails or texts, which is a terrible idea from a security perspective. āQuishingā (QR code phishing) isnāt commonplace yet, but some sources say there are thousands of cases per month. To avoid falling victim to a quishing scam, only scan QR codes from trusted sources, try to verify what a code will do once scanned, and evaluate the yellow URL preview Safari provides (when using other browsers, all you see is Open in Browser Name). Finally, always install iOS security updates promptly because they often address vulnerabilities that could be exploited with malicious data.
(Featured image based on an original by iStock.com/B4LLS)