Has anyone else seen this? It started saying I must change it within 60 minutes and pops up every time I unlock the phone now.
First prompt: “
Passcode Requirement: You must change your iPhone unlock passcode within 60 minutes.” Second prompt: “
Passcode Requirement: You must change your iPhone unlock passcode at this time.”
It is emanating from cell tower. It is likely a MDM (Mobile Device Management - an enterprise solution) trying to manage phones from cell towers. The first type of prompt ("60 minutes" timer) has the options "Later" or "Continue". After powering off (without clicking first prompt) and powering on phone a second prompt ("at this time") with only one option appears "Continue". Neither message allows navigating away from the prompt without clicking an option (i.e. Later or Continue).
When this happens do the following: power off phone, remove SIM card, power on phone, clear browsing history, power off phone, reinsert SIM card, and then power on phone.
This is required when it prevents navigating away from the prompt message. All the aforementioned explanations in articles and technical support forums did not hold true because after removing the SIM card and still having WiFi connection this activity should have persisted but did not. Remember surveillance programs wanting backdoors to bypass passcodes? What better way then to ask the owner to give the passcode up since most people do not change these often or at all. Now the cell towers can support remote MDM of phone with ubiquity.
Note: according to other articles and technical forums Verizon assumes Apple servers are pushing it and Apple has no idea about this, one plus one equals two. Logically there is no legitimate purpose for an application of any kind (except for MDM to control phone and eavesdrop) to require the unlock passcode.
It may be assumed by changing passcode with prompt the following can occur: anyone who enters a new passcode and then performs a device backup can have that backup imaged to another device and accessed via the passcode, remote management (access) of device via MDM, and or push code into phone via trojan.