Apple ramps up iCloud defense against hackers: report

In this file photo, Apple CEO Steve Jobs talks about iCloud at the Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco. AP Photo

Apple is ramping up iCloud defenses in the aftermath of hackers swiping nude photos of celebrities from the online digital vault, the Wall Street Journal reported late Sept. 4.
      
The Journal quoted Apple chief executive Tim Cook as saying iCloud accounts of film stars including Jennifer Lawrence were looted by hackers who used tactics such as correctly answering security questions to obtain passwords, or tricking victims into revealing user IDs and passwords with ruses referred to as "phishing" scams.
      
In coming weeks, Apple will start sending people alerts when attempts are made to change passwords, restore iCloud data to new devices, or when someone logs in for the first time from a new Apple gadget, the Journal reported.
      
Tools will be in place for legitimate users of accounts to seize back control. Cook was quoted as saying that Apple also wants to make people more savvy when it comes to guarding against hackers with strong passwords and other techniques.
      
"When I step back from this terrible scenario that happened and say what more could we have done, I think about the awareness piece," Cook was quoted as saying.
      
"I think we have a responsibility to ratchet that up. That's not really an engineering thing."       

Apple will expand the use of "two-factor authentication," which requires someone trying to access an account to augment a password with something else such as a temporary code sent by text message to the account holder's mobile phone.
      
Apple said Tuesday a "targeted attack" led to the release of nude photos of celebrities including Oscar winner Lawrence but insisted there was no breach of its cloud storage system.
      
The admission came as...

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