Law enforcement officials have older women younger men sex videosa tendency to "exaggerate," especially when it comes to technology.
According to a Forbes report, the new tech to fear is iOS 17's NameDrop feature. This allows users to easily share contact information through their iPhone's NFC tool and multiple police departments across the country have warned their communities of its potential danger.
SEE ALSO: Law enforcement officers admit they basically search whatever devices they want to at the borderPer the Forbes article, police stations in California, Illinois, and many more have issued the same warning on Facebook that the NameDrop feature on iPhones can "share contact information by being next to another iPhone"— with users unaware of the exchange happening. The postings on Facebook all share the same template and also warn parents in particular to turn off the "Bringing devices together" option on AirDrop for their children.
However, the truth is that this warning is a bit misinformed on how the feature actually works.
For starters, despite the NameDrop feature being a default opt-out feature, it will not just share your contact to any phone in the vicinity. In fact, to use NameDrop with another person, you almost have to physically touch both phones with each other and in the right position so that NFC can work (you can also toggle NFC on or off in the iPhone's general settings). Additionally, you control the information you share; what's exchanged is onlywhat you put down on your contact card.
That alone should quell any fears that any bad actors may try to steal your (or your children's) personal information. Plus, if you want to just turn it off for some peace of mind, you can follow the same directions from the Facebook postings by going to Settings > General > AirDrop > Bringing Devices Together to toggle that switch off.
The iOS 17 Name Drop feature is not as big of a security concern as the police make it out to be.
Topics Apple Cybersecurity iOS
Beatbot AquaSense 2 robotic pool vacuum: $500 offNYT Connections hints and answers for May 19: Tips to solve 'Connections' #708.Do Video Games Make You Violent? An InTesla Cybertruck loses topI've been a DJ at legendary clubs for years. Here's the gear I use to createMurder, mayhem, and a crown: ‘Fear Street’ makes prom a killer affairxAI investigates Grok’s ‘White Genocide’ glitchInterview with Raspberry's Founder Eben UptonAdobe's Flash Updater: Bloated, Confusing & ShadyAs Trump enables crypto corruption, Meta wants back in the stablecoin spaceNYT Strands hints, answers for May 19NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for May 18: Tips to solve Connections #2378 Free to Play Games That Are Too Good to Be TrueHow to unblock Pornhub for free in OklahomaBest headphones deal: Save 42% on the Sony WHBest cordless vacuum deal: Save $130 on the Samsung Jet 60 at Best BuyNYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for May 18: Tips to solve Connections #237Why I Left Facebook After 7 Years, But Was Forced Back IniOS 7: Six Things Apple Got Right and Six That Are Still MissingWordle today: The answer and hints for May 17, 2025 Redux: Jamaica Kincaid, James Salter, Robert Bly The Time for Art Is Now 2018 Whiting Awards: Tommy Pico, Poetry The Misunderstood Byzantine Princess and Her Magnum Opus Phoning Home Chinese Rhymes Helen Weinzweig’s Interior Feminist Espionage Novel The Jumpsuit That Will Replace All Clothes Forever Staff Picks: Bardi, Baseball, and LSD Why the French Love Horses by Chantel Tattoli Unexpected Highlights from the Antiquarian Book Fair 2018 Whiting Awards: Esmé Weijun Wang, Nonfiction Between Me and My Real Self: On Vernon Lee Poetry Rx: No Feeling Is Final by Claire Schwartz A Reckoning with Reality [TV] Photos from Our 2018 Spring Revel On Finally Reading Joseph McElroy’s Magnum Opus Crossing Over Duncan Hannah’s Seventies New York NYT mini crossword answers for June 12, 2025
2.0107s , 10519.7421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【older women younger men sex videos】,Unobstructed Information Network