Category: Apple|Dec 6, 2016 | Author: Admin

Apple rolling out ‘Report Junk’ feature for iCloud Calendar invites from unknown senders to address spam

Share on

Is this type of spam the next big for email?

Is this type of spam the next big for email?

Apple is rolling out a fix for the iCloud Calendar spam issue that has plagued users over the past few weeks. On iCloud.com, the company has added a new Report Junk feature. This lets users remove spammy invites from their calendar and reports the sender to Apple for further investigation.

The feature is currently only available on Apple’s iCloud.com Calendar web app but it is likely to roll out to the iOS and Mac native Calendar in a future software update …

Here’s the context behind the changes. Since early November, some Apple users were seeing a deluge of calendar invites from unsolicited people (usually with Chinese names) that used the description field of calendar invites to ‘advertise’ junkware and various physical products.

The problem peaked around Black Friday when the spammers tried to take advantage of the shopping frenzy. The worst outcome was that confused users would follow these unscrupulous links to who-knows-where, but simply ignoring it incurred the inconvenience of seeing unwanted events in the month view, clogging up the Calendar.

Until now, there was no good way to combat the spam if you were affected as rejecting the invitations alerted the senders that the email address was active, which would then mean more spam in the future. The Report Junk option is now the recommended solution to this problem.

Although the change will no doubt come to iPhone and iPad natively soon, for the time being users must visit iCloud.com in their browser to access the feature. The Report Junk button appears for calendars invites from unknown senders; that is, invites from people not in your contacts.

Upon selecting to report, a confirmation alert appears to explain what has happened. The alert says that ‘Junk invitations are automatically deleted from your Calendar’.

Users can dismiss the dialog or select the ‘Not Junk’ button to revert the removal if they made a mistake. Apple has not yet publicly announced the new policy; it began rolling out to iCloud.com over the weekend. The company had previously apologized to customers affected by the spam.

If you have an iCloud Calendar spam problem, then go over to iCloud.com now and flag the unsolicited invites. Although Report Junk is currently only available in the web app, the invite will be deleted from all synced calendars, including those shown in the iOS apps.

Sponsored Ads:

Comments:


Edge 125 arrives in Beta with sleeping tab improvements and other changes

Category: IT|May 1, 2024 | Author: Admin

Now the iPad opens

Category: Apple|Apr 30, 2024 | Author: Admin

Woke up locked out of Apple ID on iPhone

Category: Apple|Apr 29, 2024 | Author: Admin

Google has a hidden collection of highly-addictive retro games

Category: Google|Apr 28, 2024 | Author: Admin

Google is officially a $2 trillion company

Category: Google|Apr 27, 2024 | Author: Admin

Snowden: “DO NOT use Reddit!”

Category: IT|Apr 26, 2024 | Author: Admin

Popular Google app used by millions set to close in a few weeks

Category: Google|Apr 25, 2024 | Author: Admin

Cheeky, YouTube!

Category: Google|Apr 24, 2024 | Author: Admin

This is the date Apple will reveal new iPads

Category: Apple|Apr 23, 2024 | Author: Admin

Only possible with VPN

Category: IT|Apr 22, 2024 | Author: Admin

Apple sidles into sideloading in the EU

Category: Apple|Apr 21, 2024 | Author: Admin

Report: Microsoft-OpenAI ownership might get conditional OK from EU regulators

Category: IT|Apr 20, 2024 | Author: Admin

Giant change at Google could change everything

Category: Google|Apr 19, 2024 | Author: Admin

Now Windows will be bothered about this too

Category: Microsoft|Apr 18, 2024 | Author: Admin

Test the new AI trick with Logitech

Category: IT|Apr 17, 2024 | Author: Admin
more