Apple
is to bolster iCloud security after intimate pictures of celebrities were
stolen and published online, chief executive Tim Cook has said.
Alerts
sent to users will now include one when data is restored to a new device, Mr
Cook told the Wall Street Journal.
iCloud
accounts may been broken into when hackers correctly guessed passwords or
through phishing, he said.
But
Apple's security had not been breached.
The
company already
alerts users by email when a new device tries to gain access to
data and when someone tries to change a password.
Apple
will start sending push notifications about activity on user accounts in about
two weeks.
"When
I step back from this terrible scenario that happened and say what more could
we have done, I think about the awareness piece," he told the Wall Street
Journal. "I think we have a responsibility to ratchet that up. That's not
really an engineering thing."
Intimate
pictures of a number of personalities were published online this week.
Actress
Jennifer Lawrence confirmed a leaked topless photo of her was genuine.
BBC
Business
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