Skip to main content

iMessage and FaceTime security boosted with extra layer of protection

apple boosts security for imessage and facetime how to use updated feature copy
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Apple this week introduced an extra layer of security for Apple’s iMessage and FaceTime apps.

Similar protection, in the form of two-factor verification, was added to users’ iCloud and Apple ID accounts back in September shortly after a number of celebrities had their accounts hacked. At the time, Apple boss Tim Cook promised to improve security for his company’s products.

However, with iMessage and FaceTime, the situation is a little different. For these services, you’ll need to enter an app-specific password along with your usual login credentials next time you sign in to the apps. This will only be requested if you’ve already set up two-factor verification with your Apple ID account, something you should seriously consider doing if you haven’t already done so. You can generate an app-specific password by logging in to your Apple ID account at appleid.apple.com and hitting the ‘Password and Security’ button. 

Of course, the new security measures mean that another person attempting to sign in to iMessage or FaceTime from another device or machine will also be asked for this special password, though only you will have access to it.

Full instructions on setting up two-factor verification can be found here, and you can learn more about app-specific passwords here.

Related: How to pick a strong password

The extra layer of security should go a long way to keeping your accounts safe, so if you use Apple products and haven’t yet enabled two-factor verification, we highly recommend you take a few moments to set it up.

With so many people apparently continuing to use absurd passwords across multiple online accounts, and with hackers constantly sniffing around for opportunities to nab data, some sort of two-step security option is offered by most major online firms these days, among them Google, Microsoft, TwitterDropbox, and Facebook.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Why RCS for the iPhone is Apple’s biggest announcement of 2023
A person holding the Apple iPhone 15 Plus.

Hell has frozen over. On November 16, 2023, Apple made the very unexpected announcement that it was bringing support for RCS on the iPhone in 2024.

In 2022, Tim Cook himself said that he’d rather sell you an iPhone instead of ever bringing RCS support to the iPhone because he thought customer demand for RCS wasn’t there. Google has made numerous attempts to shame Apple over its pushback of RCS over the years.

Read more
Nothing’s iMessage for Android app is unbelievably bad
The Nothing Chats splash page in the app.

Earlier this week, Nothing did the unexpected and launched the "Nothing Chats" app for the Nothing Phone 2. The premise? Let anyone with a Nothing Phone 2 send and receive texts via iMessage. Nothing partnered with Sunbird to make Nothing Chats work, with Nothing essentially using Sunbird's own messaging tech to bring iMessage to Android.

It was a bold idea ... but one that was short-lived. That's because Nothing Chats is already dead (for the time being) due to a shocking number of security vulnerabilities that were discovered almost immediately. And by security vulnerabilities, we don't mean minor oversights that could have been easy to overlook. We're talking about major, game-breaking design flaws that massively compromise the personal information of anyone who used Nothing Chats.
The problem with Nothing Chats
iMessage on an iPhone 15 Pro Max (left) and Nothing Chats on a Nothing Phone 2 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Read more
It’s finally happening — your iPhone is getting RCS in 2024
iMessage on an iPhone 14 Pro Max, plus iMessage on an Android phone using the Beeper app.

Today is a day I truly didn't expect would ever happen. On November 16, 2023, Apple officially confirmed that RCS texting is finally coming to the iPhone in 2024.

Yes, you read that correctly. Starting "later next year," Apple will add RCS support to the iPhone. In other words, if you have an Android phone and are texting someone with an iPhone, you'll be able to text each other over RCS instead of SMS. That means you'll get many iMessage-like features such as typing indicators, read receipts, higher-resolution photo/video sharing, etc.

Read more