Idmsa / business account? / MDM

idmsa- as I opened my iPhone I was asked to confirm that I would allow signing in with idmsa- so I impatiently taped on it- then thought why do I need this? I’m obviously not tech savvy…

then I read on about business account and managed accounts which I am very concerned about, I am not a managed account yet it seems that I may be getting tricked into this option illegally by my neighbor a hacker creep…. Why do I need idmsa? I better not be managed and if I am it would explain how this person knows so much and why so much fraud goes on with my online accounts . Please don’t bother saying this is being paranoid, it’s not paranoiawhen things are actually happening- big difference

iPhone 16 Pro Max, iOS 18

Posted on Nov 26, 2025 1:51 AM

Reply
2 replies

Nov 26, 2025 8:23 PM in response to diamantina85

If you feel an unauthorized person/app is remotely using, controlling or monitoring your device, then that is possible only if you have done one or more of the following Don'ts...


  1. Don't hand over an iPhone to kids or to a stranger without Enabling Guided Access
  2. Don't share Apple IDs
  3. Don't Jailbreak
  4. Don't share sensitive information pertaining to your device
  5. Don't give in to Phishing
  6. Don't plug in your device in Airports and Public places through third-party cables and trust the device. Beware of Juice Jacking. (Especially in India)
  7. Don't leave your iPhone unlocked and unattended in public places like offices, schools, malls, etc.


If one of the above is true then quickly change the Apple ID Password and Return iPhone settings to their defaults.


  1. Immediately change your Apple ID password
    1. Go to Settings → [your name] → Sign-In & Security → Change Password.
    2. This signs out anyone using your account.
  2. Enable Two-Factor Authentication (if not already): Same menu → Two-Factor Authentication → Turn On.
  3. Check for any unknown devices linked to your account:
    1. Settings → [your name] → Devices.:
    2. If you see anything you don’t recognize, tap it → Remove from Account.
  4. Check for unknown profiles or device management:
    1. Settings → General → VPN & Device Management.
    2. If you see a profile you didn’t install, tap it → Remove Profile.
  5. Check Accessibility & Screen Sharing settings
    1. Settings → Accessibility → Switch Control, Voice Control, or Remote Control — turn off anything you didn’t set up.
    2. Settings → General → AirPlay & Handoff → make sure AirPlay is set to Ask or Never Automatically.
  6. Sign out of iCloud everywhere and reset
    1. Go to Settings → [your name] → Sign Out (you’ll need your password).
    2. Then back up your photos to iCloud or your computer.
    3. Go to Settings → General → Transfer or Reset iPhone → Erase All Content and Settings.:
    4. Set it up as a New iPhone (not from a backup), so nothing suspicious is restored.
  7. Update iOS: Always keep the latest iOS version for security fixes.


If a person has ever had your passcode, they could’ve installed something quietly — so the full erase and setting up as new is the safest option. How to factory reset your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch



Keep the iPhone updated to the latest iOS always and never Jailbreak. That's it.


iOS / iPadOS devices cannot be hacked or infected with Viruses / Malware / Spyware *** unless you have intentionally downloaded spurious software or unauthorized apps directly from the internet and installed them on your device, and/or have Jailbroken


It (Hacking) also depends on how careful you are in sharing sensitive and valuable information pertaining to your iPhone such as Passcode, Password, etc with your friends and family members.


Be judicious when sharing the device's sensitive and valuable information with friends and family members.



**The primary reason for this is Sandboxing. All third-party apps are “sandboxed”, so they are restricted from accessing files stored by other apps or from making changes to the device. Sandboxing is designed to prevent apps from gathering or modifying information stored by other apps.


Security of runtime process in iOS and iPadOS - Apple Support



The sandbox on an iPhone is a security feature that creates a restricted environment for each app to run in isolation from other apps and the operating system. It is a core component of iOS's security architecture and plays a crucial role in making iPhones more secure.



If you doubt the authenticity of the information provided earlier, you have two alternatives:

  1. Report the hacking incident to local law enforcement authorities and actively pursue the case.
  2. Accept the credibility of the information; it is impervious to hacking. Just as some individuals hold unconventional beliefs, such as a flat Earth or moon landing denial, one has the freedom to believe in anything. The choice ultimately rests with you in this open and free world.


Nov 26, 2025 8:42 PM in response to diamantina85

diamantina85 wrote:

idmsa- as I opened my iPhone I was asked to confirm that I would allow signing in with idmsa- so I impatiently taped on it- then thought why do I need this? I’m obviously not tech savvy…


IDMSA (full name idmsa.apple.com) is the name of the guard shack placed at the conceptual network security fence built around Apple and Apple services, and you will have to present your identification badge and your secret passcode to the guard to be permitted access within parts of the fenced perimeter at Apple.


IDMSA is what you authenticate to.


In more technical jargon, IDMSA a cryptic acronym used as the collective name of the group of computer servers — computers larger, faster, and with more resources and with capabilities necessary for handling the billions of network connections that can be happening — used to provide authentication services for controlling and accessing Apple apps and services. That includes the authentication services used to allow (or to deny) access into the Apple Support Communities.


Much like the network host names you may have assigned to your own local computers and to printers and other devices in your network, or the network host names that have been automatically generated and assigned, idmsa.apple.com is a network host name. Your firewall on your own network might not have a host name assigned by you, but the authentication-related part of the (immense) Apple firewall and authentication services implementation does have a host name, and that name is IDMSA.



then I read on about business account and managed accounts which I am very concerned about, I am not a managed account yet it seems that I may be getting tricked into this option illegally by my neighbor a hacker creep…. Why do I need idmsa? I better not be managed and if I am it would explain how this person knows so much and why so much fraud goes on with my online accounts . Please don’t bother saying this is being paranoid, it’s not paranoiawhen things are actually happening- big difference


There’s a whole lot of AI slop, raging lies, hilarious rubbish, propaganda, and the ever-popular ad-supported clickbait on the ‘net, isn’t there. But then fearful readers are quite profitable, too.

Idmsa / business account? / MDM

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