![]() ![]() However, we’ve notified Apple anyway, and hope it can at a minimum take action against the apps promoted by these scams. Unfortunately, since users are essentially consenting to this scam via existing Apple-provided mechanisms for obtaining consent, there may not be much that Apple can do to stop this particular wave of calendar spam. Of course, as with all things, nothing is infallible, so if you find that a malicious site has slipped past, please copy the address of the page from Safari’s address bar and submit it via a support ticket to Malwarebytes support. This should prevent you from visiting malicious pages in Safari. You can also use the Web Protection feature in Malwarebytes Security for iOS. ![]() If there is an alert preventing you from taking action until you tap a button, and you don’t know what to do, just restart your iPhone. If an alert is preventing that, click Cancel if that’s an option. If you can close the tab or navigate to another page in the browser, do so. Don’t click any buttons consenting to whatever the site is asking, such as OK, Allow, Install, etc. ![]() First and foremost, if you find yourself seeing a strange message in Safari on your iPhone, don’t believe it, and don’t do what it tells you to do.
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