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password to unlock your iphone backup file

how to do i find the password to unlock your iphone backup file

Posted on Oct 18, 2011 7:04 AM

Reply
375 replies

Oct 1, 2014 2:31 PM in response to andycarmichael

andycarmichael, YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY CORRECT. Thank you, you just brought my blood pressure back to planet Earth (the new grey hairs, however, are a permanent relic of this misadventure).


Thanks to your tip, I tried every password I've ever used under the sun - 99% of which have never once been associated with my Apple ID, iTunes, anything Apple - and finally I was able to restore my phone when a password that I use for my electric bill website login and as well as for Skype worked. I have never used this password for anything but those two things, and certainly not anything Apple related - but I have entered it when logging into Skype from my iPhone.

Lawrence Finch, I wish you were right and that Apple didn't have the ability to "listen in". Unfortunately, I think you're dead wrong on this. I'd even bet a lot of money on it; sure, one person may not remember doing something, but count the number of other people on this thread that have had a similar experience and the trend speaks for itself.

Nov 22, 2014 6:17 AM in response to dianafromherndon

Was going crazy not figuring out what password iCloud/iPhone could be asking for. After reading several of these posts, I started trying all possible passwords I've used. Now, I've only used one password for iCloud, but the password that worked was the windows login for my old, old laptop. I know I would never use Windows login for Apple stuffs. How did iCloud access that password? My best guess is the password was captured when computer went to screensaver. Can't understand why Apple has no remedy either if user can't figure this tricky thing out.

Dec 17, 2014 9:40 AM in response to emilywat90

emilywat90 wrote:


ALL YOU GUYS HAVE TO DO IS ENTER YOUR APPLE ID PASSWORD WITH NO CAPS AT ALL!!!!!!

The password for an encrypted back up is not necessarily the passcode to an Apple ID. I never use my Apple ID password for my encrypted back ups.


Forum tip: typing all in caps is considered shouting and therefore, a bit rude.


Best of luck.

Dec 22, 2014 12:26 AM in response to IdrisSeabright

FWIW, my experience this past weekend:


Had backed up my iPhone 5S ahead of going to buy a new 6. Did not check the encrypt box (or so I thought). Came home with the 6 and tried to set it up as a new phone and it asked for the password. Like all of you, I went ballistic at the thought of losing my backup data. Spent an hour stuffing passwords at it, no luck. Called Apple and no luck. Searched Google for 4 hours no luck, other than a link to something called Tenorsoft Backup Unlocker. Now the fun part, its a Windows program and I have gone 100% Mac. So I bought and installed VMWare Fusion, loaded up a Windows image (that's like going back and dating a girl you thought was cute but actually wasn't). Paid $70 for the software, located the backup file and turned it lose using brute force to crack it. It ran for 30 hours straight and was only 25% through and hadn't found anything. So I started going back thinking about old iTunes passwords. Sure enough, I used an older password from last year and it worked. Apparently I had chosen to encrypt a backup at some prior point because obviously iTunes didn't just up and check that box ahead of the trip to the Verizon store. It had to have been checked long prior and I didn't recall.


Now the funny part. In addition to brute force the crack software allows you to build a dictionary of your most common passwords and it tests those to see if some variant might work. I entered the actual password that worked on the backup, and the software said it couldn't find a match. So just beware, you might waste $70 and still not be any better off. I would have bet my life yesterday that this was an iTunes bug. It's not, its us forgetting (as is proven here but those who DID have luck with the software and being able to get their password after seeing the first two letters appear from the brute force.) The same first two letters of the password they used to do the encryption in the first place.

Feb 13, 2015 2:27 PM in response to JRTX

Man you're genius 🙂


Guys i work in IT and we're upgrading bunch of users to a newer iPhone. It's a real ****!!! On most of them when you try to restore to a new phone you get to put that stupid password, which drives me insane. If user doesn't know his backup password then he gets no data restored to his new phone - simple as that...


I tried to back up a new phone and there is no way you can decline to create a password, apple forcing you to do so. So what i usually do on a new phone i put the same password as their pass-code.


Apple is trying to make computer backups hard so people start using iCloud backups and pay them $$$ for extra storage...


Cheers

password to unlock your iphone backup file

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