So let’s say you just bought a new device and you’re giving me the old one. While you trust me to wipe the drive to protect your privacy, you still want to reset it before you give it to me. Here are some things to remember.
For a PC or Mac computer, you can reset the device. If you reset your iPad or iPhone, you need to disassociate it from your account FIRST, then reset it to factory. Same with a Kindle. If that seems confusing, it kind of is. Because of security, Apple devices are particularly associated with the owner. They allow find me options, data across devices, and cloud backups. All that means the device is tightly connected to your Apple sign-on, and therefore, a reset will wipe the data, but the device will still remember you. It’s sweet really. And annoying. I am sometimes given devices that are still connected to the prior owner and there isn’t anything I, or law enforcement, can do about it. So, on an Apple device, you need to go into settings, and sign-out of your iCloud account, your Apple account, and turn of the Find My option. For a PC, you can go into Start, System, Troubleshoot, and reset the PC and save, or not save, the data, depending on what you are doing. I have some links that will help, instead of my gibberish. For iPhone, iPad, iPod, look HERE. For Android or iPhone, look HERE. For a Mac, look at THIS. For a PC, see This. or this Today's Tech Tip comes from Rick's Daily Tips
Rick has a slew of great tips! As you surely know by now, there are numerous crooks, spammers and scammers using Facebook to perpetrate scams and hoaxes on innocent people. The miscreants use various methods and tools to scam their victims, and one of their favorite tools is fake Facebook profiles. Fake profiles typically take one of two forms: 1 – A completely fake profile that’s made up out of thin air. 2 – Cloned profiles that were created by copying photos and information from the profiles of real Facebook users. The completely fake profiles are usually very easy to spot. Here’s what to look for: 1 – The profile picture is a photo of a celebrity or an extremely attractive model. While some scammers will steal photos of real, average looking people and use them as the profile pictures on their fake accounts, most of them like to use photos of really attractive men and women to entice their victims to accept friend requests from them. If the person in the profile picture is very attractive and you don’t recognize them or if the photo is of someone famous, it’s a virtual certainty that the entire profile is a fake. 2 – The posts on the profile’s Timeline will have very little or no personal content. If you take a look at the Timeline and see nothing but shared posts and links with no personal status updates, odds are the profile is a fake. Most scammers are basically lazy by nature (that’s why they would rather scam folks instead of get a respectable job), and creating real content in the form of status updates isn’t easy. It takes work. Most scammers are also in a hurry, and it takes a lot less time to share links and posts that others have put up than it does to write a realistic-looking status update. The really lazy scammers won’t even bother sharing links and other users’ status updates. They’ll simply upload a few stolen pics and immediately start adding friends to the account. 3 – There aren’t many photos in the profile’s “Photos” section, and they’re pretty much all of the same person. Most real users tend to upload a wide variety of photos to their Facebook accounts. For example, there will be pictures of them with their kids and pictures taken at events like weddings and birthday parties. And vacation pics are quite popular as well. Just anything and everything is fair game when it comes to uploading pics to Facebook. That’s why just a few pics of the same person is always such a huge red flag. 4 – If it’s public, check out the profile’s friends list. If a profile has a lot of links and shared posts on the Timeline but just a handful of friends, it’s likely a fake profile. Most scammers work on posting content to a fake account’s Timeline before they start adding friends to it in order to give the profile an air of legitimacy. However, the reverse of this is often true as well. Some scammers prefer to load up the account with “friends” before they start adding photos and posts. Just remember that a real user will typically add Timeline content and friends at roughly the same pace. 5 – You receive a friend request from someone who is already on your friends list. This is one of the best tip-offs that a profile is a fake cloned profile. If you receive a friend request from someone you’re already friends with, check out the account’s Timeline and About pages. Chances are you’re at least somewhat familiar with the types of posts and photos your real friend puts up on Facebook so anything that’s out out of the ordinary for them should stick out like a sore thumb. While lots of people do create multiple real profiles for various reasons, they’ll usually give you a heads-up by saying something like “I had to create a new account because…“ When that happens the person will almost always stop posting on the old account and start posting on the new account with the same style and patterns they used when posting on the old one. Luckily, it’s very easy to determine whether a duplicate friend request is legit or not. Simply send the person a private message at the old account and ask them if the new account is really theirs. If the answer is yes or you don’t receive any answer at all, then you can be fairly certain that the new account is legitimate. If the answer is no, you’ll know for sure that it isn’t. That’s all there is to it. Now you know what to look for when you’re unsure about a accepting friend request from someone you don’t know or from someone you’re already friends with. This was a funny one. I was looking for tips for this column, and it turns out, Windows offers tips. It’s under Start/Apps/Tips. I found it under ‘T’. That’s a tip in itself.
I don’t know if Microsoft will be changing them out, adding to them, or just letting them be. I’m guessing they will get updated. Read about it HERE. Are you getting a new Mac? You should. And give me your old Mac when you’re finished transferring your data. Speaking of which, when you set up your new Mac, it will ask if you want to bring data over from your old Mac, or PC. That’s a seriously handy tool, one that Windows has yet to include. It can transfer using an internet connection so it is amazingly easy to use. I don’t usually pick sides over Macs and PCs, but Apple wins big time for this feature. Getting a new PC? I highly recommend it. Same rules. Make a good backup, to the cloud or an external drive. I have an article on transferring data HERE. Surprises: Yes, you may have some. Whether it’s a Mac or PC, some things may not transfer, or work after they transfer. There are things you can try to make older programs work. If you have a Windows 7 or XP computer you are transferring from (yikes, I hope not) Then read THIS. Mac OS Compatibility mode? None that I could find. Speaking of compatibility, another way to run an older app designed for an older OS is to run the older OS in VirtualBox. That’s a program, available on Mac and PC, that will run a “virtual’ computer inside your computer. It’s a bit techy, but if you are desperate, it could be just what you need. A link to those instructions are HERE. If that doesn’t confuse you, then you can definitely do it. Otherwise, give it a few tries before you scream. It’s pretty cool when it works. I have Windows 10 running on my iMac in VirtualBox. Since about half the world’s phones are Android, and since Windows 11 is now making Android apps run on their OS, this may be topical.
There is a malware being distributed in some Android apps that can basically lead to a complete takeover of the phone. While the exploit was found in 19 different apps, and have since been removed from the app store, it is worth reading the full article HERE. Check to be sure you haven’t downloaded any of these specific apps. Malware is all around. Keep your computer and phones up to date. Be careful what you download. |
Tech TipsThere's a lot of fake information out there. Please be scrupulous about what you share on Facebook and other platforms. Here are some trusted sources. Please don't rely on social media for your information.
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December 2024
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