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Beware of iCloud Phishing Attacks, MetaMask Warns Apple Users

This comes after an Apple user lost crypto assets worth $650,000 from his MetaMask crypto wallet.

 

ConsenSys-owned crypto wallet provider MetaMask is warning its community regarding possible phishing attacks via Apple’s iCloud service. In a Twitter thread posted on April 17, the company warned its customers that the encrypted passwords for their accounts, called MetaMask vaults, will be uploaded to Apple’s cloud service if the iCloud backup option is enabled on the app. 

 As a result, a phishing account that exploits a customer’s iCloud account will also compromise their passwords and hence their crypto wallets. This comes after an Apple user, who goes by “revive_dom” claimed on Twitter to have lost crypto assets worth $650,000 from his MetaMask crypto wallet. 

“This is how it happened. Got a phone call from Apple, literally from Apple (on my caller Id) Called it back because I suspected fraud and it was an Apple number. So, I believed them. They asked for a code that was sent to my phone and 2 seconds later my entire MetaMask was wiped,” the user wrote in his thread. 

The phishing campaign involves certain default device settings in iPhones, iPads which see a user’s seed phrase or “password-encrypted MetaMask vault” stored on the iCloud if the user has enabled automatic backups for their application data. Metamask is an online crypto wallet that allows users to store their crypto assets such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc, as well as non-fungible-tokens (NFTs).

“If you have enabled iCloud backup for app data, this will include your password-encrypted MetaMask vault. If your password isn’t strong enough, and someone phishes your iCloud credentials, this can mean stolen funds,” the company tweeted. 

Serpent, the founder of a project called DAPE NFT, explained how the fraudsters stole from a victim. On April 15, the victim received multiple text messages asking to reset his Apple ID password along with a supposed call from Apple which was ultimately a spoofed caller ID.

During the call, the fraudsters said there was unusual activity on the victim’s Apple ID and asked for a one-time verification code. This is the six-digit verification code sent out to a user when they want to reset their Apple ID password or even login from a different laptop or iPhone, iPad, etc. After receiving the 2FA code, they were able to take control over the Apple ID, and access iCloud which gave them access to the victim's MetaMask.

 How to shut cloud backups?

Metamask in a warning tweet has requested users to disable iCloud backups by following the steps mentioned below: - 

Go to Settings > Profile > iCloud > Manage Storage > Backups, then turn off the toggle. 

To ensure that iCloud will not “surprise” you with backups you didn’t allow, go to Settings > Apple ID/iCloud > iCloud Backup and turn it off.
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