Does anyone else's iPhone ask for their iCloud password every single time they turn on their iPhone? This started happening after I updated to iOS 9.1.
Happens to me as well. Pop-up appears.Does anyone else's iPhone ask for their iCloud password every single time they turn on their iPhone? This started happening after I updated to iOS 9.1.
It's 'all iCloud, all the time' now for Apple apparently.
They seem absolutely determined to ram this crap down everyone's throats whether we want it or not.
I try my absolute best not to. In fact, I avoid "the cloud" like the plague. Never once have I enabled it when setting up a new computer, a new phone or even when installing a simple software upgrade. But Apple nevertheless seems to be on some sort of holy quest to make it a feature that's impossible to avoid. And the worst part is that they now foist it on you in new and different ways without even telling you that they're doing so.You aren't forced to use it.
I doubt that is the case, since I can choose "not now" and the message goes away sometimes. Strange and annoying.Yeah this happens to me every time my phone gets turned off/on, thought it was a bug but perhaps its just their way of adding more security? Its not often that people let their phone batteries die nowadays so the usage case might be a lost and found phone, preventing anyone from having access to your data.
In any case, it is slightly annoying....
I can do that too, but I noticed that when I do, it disables iMessage and FaceTime on my Mac mini, so I have to log-in every time. It's definitely a bug, and I'm not too happy about itYes I get this too.
I dismiss the pop up.
Yes, me tooDoes anyone else's iPhone ask for their iCloud password every single time they turn on their iPhone? This started happening after I updated to iOS 9.1.
I share your view 100%!I try my absolute best not to. In fact, I avoid "the cloud" like the plague. Never once have I enabled it when setting up a new computer, a new phone or even when installing a simple software upgrade. But Apple nevertheless seems to be on some sort of holy quest to make it a feature that's impossible to avoid. And the worst part is that they now foist it on you in new and different ways without even telling you that they're doing so.
Case in point - I recently purchased three movies from the iTunes Store with the intent that they would provide a nice diversion on a long plane flight I had scheduled. I purchased the movies, downloaded the movies and even played a small portion of the beginning of the movies to ensure that they had all downloaded correctly. No mention of any goddamned cloud was made at ANY point in this process. A couple of days later I board my flight and, no sooner than I've reached cruising altitude, I discover all the movies are completely missing from my iPhone. There is no trace of them. It's as if they were never purchased.
As soon as I was back on the ground (and had coverage), subsequent investigations revealed that they were "in the cloud" waiting to be downloaded to my mobile device. How is that possible? I purchased them on my mobile device. I had already viewed portions of them on my mobile device. I never once encountered any mention of the cloud when making or downloading my purchase. It's maddening the way they insinuate this crap into your life without the tiniest shred of permission. I pay good money to Apple to purchase devices with sufficient amounts of memory that I don't have to deal with any cloud. All I ask is that they quit trying to shove it down my throat at every turn.
It keeped asking me, but I think I fixed it for me.
What I did: Settings -> iCloud -> Tap on your Name(iCloudAccount) -> and type in your Password.
I closed Settings and it was gone. Havent had a Popup since then.
Can anyone confirm this fix?
You're right, I've tried that before and it will ask for my iCloud password after a reboot every single time.I did that, but when I restarted my phone it happened again.
You're right, I've tried that before and it will ask for my iCloud password after a reboot every single time.
At this point, I'm convinced that it's an iOS 9.1 bug, and I'm not sure if iOS 9.2 fixes it.
There is a chance that this is just a new security measure.
Perhaps, but choosing "not now" does not deactivate iCloud, so what would be the purpose?There is a chance that this is just a new security measure.