I found someone try hack my App ID from iCloud.

I found so many files stay in my iMac, and cannot be deleted. They try to use phone calls from my country (Thailand) and Malaysia. I’m so bored from those problems, I cannot use them well, lag in use. Also, I cannot change my password. I think something wrong about that security for user. I do not use iCloud now from that errors.


[Edited by Moderator]

Posted on Sep 2, 2024 3:41 AM

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8 replies

Sep 2, 2024 4:36 PM in response to DKII0

In no particular order…


AIS, DTAC, and TrueMove H (presumably TRUE in that log) are Thai carriers.


What that log might indicate?


Mac doesn’t have in-built cellular, so whatever that log might represent is indirect, or was added onto macOS.


Most macOS files are protected against modification and deletion.


If you’ve somehow lost control of your Apple ID, and cannot change your password, you will want to address that first. That reset may well require use of Account Recovery:


How to use account recovery when you can’t reset your Apple ID password - Apple Support


Here is how to get a screenshot: Take a screenshot on your Mac - Apple Support


Unidentified and unfortunately potato-quality images isn’t all that helpful for what you’re reporting, too.


Sep 3, 2024 11:24 PM in response to John Galt

John Galt wrote:

As before I have no idea what information that indistinct and nearly illegible photograph is intended to convey. If you are having trouble with your Mac, or with your Apple ID, or if there is some other concern your fellow Apple products users can help you address, you need to start from the beginning and compose a question that can be understood.


A lot of the files in that fuzzy screenshot look to me like C or Objective C header files that are part of macOS, or Xcode. I have Xcode installed on my Mac, and a bunch of the files in that screenshot look like .h files which – on my system – are located in a few levels below Macintosh HD > System > Library > Frameworks > CoreImage.


If the OP were to do a Quick Look on some of those .h files, he might find things like


/* CoreImage - CIRAWFilter.h
 
 Copyright (c) 2006 Apple, Inc.
 All rights reserved. */

#ifndef CIRAWFILTER_H
#define CIRAWFILTER_H

…


Someone poking around in the system, and then accidentally moving or copying these files up to the Applications folder, might explain how these things got alongside Dictionary and Digital Color Meter. (On my Mac, Dictionary is in the Applications folder; DIgital Color Meter is in the Applications > Utilities one.)


It certainly is a much more plausible explanation than someone "hacking" the Mac via iCloud.

Sep 2, 2024 4:22 PM in response to DKII0

As before I have no idea what information that indistinct and nearly illegible photograph is intended to convey. If you are having trouble with your Mac, or with your Apple ID, or if there is some other concern your fellow Apple products users can help you address, you need to start from the beginning and compose a question that can be understood.


Writing an effective Apple Support Communities question - Apple Community can serve as an introductory guide. I understand your native language may not be English, but you are welcome to compose a question in a language you are more comfortable using. We can use online tools to translate it: https://duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/results/translation/

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I found someone try hack my App ID from iCloud.

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