Every account using Sign in with Apple is automatically protected with two-factor authentication. On Apple devices, users are persistently signed in and can reauthenticate anytime with Face ID or Touch ID.
Sign in with Apple is designed to give you confidence in your new users. It uses on-device machine learning and other information to provide a new privacy-friendly signal that helps you determine if a new user is a real person or an account you might want to take another look at.
Sign in with Apple allows you to set up a user account in your system, complete with name, verified email address, and unique stable identifiers that allow the user to sign in to your app with their Apple ID. It works on iOS, macOS, tvOS, and watchOS. You can also add Sign in with Apple to your website or versions of your app running on other platforms. Once a user sets up their account, they can sign in anywhere you deploy your app.
In Xcode in Target > your app> signing/capabilities enable or disable and re-enable the automatically manage signing option and then check below if your team appears. Otherwise check Xcode >Preferences > Accounts >Team if the team appears, if necessary delete the Apple ID in the Apple ID list by clicking (-) in the lower left corner and re-entering the Apple ID by clicking (+)
I'm facing the same issue my client invited me to join their team a couple of days ago (they added my Apple Developer account email) but it does not show up in Xcode while it does on App Store Connect, i tried logging out & Sign In back in inside Xcode but only my personal team shows up - any Update on this issue?
Sorry for the delay everyone... it turned out to be a permission issue. This is how to solve it... you need an admin to give you signing and certification capabilities. To add profile & certificates capabilities:Navigate to App Store Connect > Users and AccessSelect your user account. (You may need to be a team admin to do this.)In section "Developer Resources", check the box "Access to Certificates, Identifiers & Profile."Hope this helps
I've used "sign in with apple" to log into several 3rd party services. My understanding is that apple creates a strong password and a private relay e-mail address and remembers both for me... which is great.
The problem is that some of these services require actually typing in your password occasionally. So my question is: how can I see the actual underlying passwords stored for these accounts? I couldn't find them in Keychain...
It appears that there is an option -- within Apple's settings -- to "stop using Apple ID". (To find this option, I went to system preferences on my mac, chose Apple ID, then "Passwords and security" then "Apps using Apple ID", then the name of the 3rd party service.) Can anyone explain what happens if I click this?
Today I have been bombarded with numerous requests from my phone to "Enter the Password for 'olde...@oldemail.com' in Settings" all day. I changed the e-mail for my Apple ID months ago, yet still parts of my phone carry with it my old e-mail address regardless of the official change. More so, I've typed in my password for my old Apple ID and no matter what, it rejects it even though I know it is correct (I didn't change passwords when I switched e-mails). Has anyone had this issue and knows anyway to solve it? Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks. x
Having the exact same issue with my husband's new iPhone 7. It keeps asking to sign in to my (not his) account. Have tried signing out of everything (both phones and both computers), turning off phone, etc.
I set up the phone from a backup of his old one...should I try to erase and set up as new? The problem is, I have no idea which of his old apps he bought with my ID and which with his...I imagine as soon as I try installing ones bought with my ID the same problem will occur again.
I'm having the same issue. I just got an iphone 7 and used my icloud backup from my old iphone to get all the data onto the 7. But a popup keeps asking for my mom's apple ID email and password- which I used years ago to download a few things on her devices. But all of those apps/music have since been under my apple id and my icloud for years. I can't go change the email address on the Apple ID account page to my mom's because that is currently her ID. When I do log into my mom's ID when it pops up, my phone can't update or download any new apps. So then I log out of itunes/app store and retry, which is when the popup appears asking for my mom's ID.
So I finally fixed my husband's new phone. I did a restore and set it up as new, and he opted not to install a bunch of old apps (mostly games he didn't play anyway). The apps he did choose were relatively new and definitely purchased with his own iTunes account. So far, several hours later, no annoying popup asking to log in to my account.
The key seemed to be that I made sure the apps available to restore via his computer were only the ones purchased through his account. Setting up the new phone with a backup of the old included some old apps that were purchased with my account.
Did you ever see the following replies that your provided solution does not work if the previous old ID is being used by other person??? Care to help & solve the correct issue here?- upgrading to iphone is getting tiresome & sucky these days.
I'm having the same problem. Have an iPhone 6s, on the most recent version of software. No idea why this is happening but suddenly I can't update any apps because when I try it asks to validate with an old ID. There is no place in my settings/icloud to log-out. What else can I do? Tried restore - no luck.
this dont work as I cant rename the apple id back to the old email address. The old email address is no longer in use so I cant verify it to change it back? so what do i do now without restoring and settings up as new ? il lose everything if i do that and having a back up is no good as the issue is in my back up?
The fix to this problem that I found is to delete all apps bought with old Apple Id, and install them again with new Apple Id. At least those that you still need. Of course it is a problem for paid apps, nobody wants to pay twice.
hey every one i have the same problem (similar) with my iPhone 7. it first happened back in february when i first got the phone and was setting it up. for some reason the iPhone picked up a old account during a sync. the accounts about 7 years old. I've tried doing resets just with the phone (off button and volume down) dos'nt work i haven't tried deleting everything manually as yet which i probably will do. I'm not sure wether i should try the hard reset because I'm pretty sure i will need the apple id and pass word to get back into the phone. these i don't really have i only have the iTunes and app store account. is that enough to get me back in?
I have the same problem and this protocol does not work! My old Apple ID is from an old work e-mail account that is no longer valid. When I try to temporarily change the Apple ID to the old account it needs to send a VERIFICATION Code to that old e-mail address, which is not active. It is silly that this issue has been a problem for so many years and Apple has done nothing to easily correct it.
I managed to fix my iPhone by doing a complete restore through iTunes. theres a special way do it just google complete iPhone 7 restore. and follow the directions and it fixes the problem (good videos on youtube). the only thing is i haven't bothered tring to restore back up to my iPhone because i think the problem may come back if i do. so in other words you will loss a lot of stuff off your iPhone other then contacts and what ever is linked to the apple id that you want to use (unless you use a new one) but its the only way to fix it.
The most likely reason this is happening is that you have songs in your library from another person. When your iPhone restores from a backup, it steps through each song and if the song was originally purchased by someone other than you, it prompts you to login as that other person.
Use the Track Down Purchases iTunes script for $1.99 on your Mac to find and delete the affected songs. Then, sync your old iPhone with iTunes, manually back it up, and then restore again from your new iPhone.
It will not let me EDIT my AppleID to one that already exists, creating a loop here. So, I reset the password on the old APpleID (the one that keeps popping up for a password over and over) on a PC. SIgned in just fine on the PC. Go to the phone and enter the new password, it thinks and then come back with the same pop-up over and over asking for the password.
Sign In with Apple gives users the option of anonymizing their data,including their email address, when signing in. Users who choose this optionhave email addresses with the domain privaterelay.appleid.com. Whenyou use Sign In with Apple in your app, you must comply with any applicabledeveloper policies or terms from Apple regarding these anonymized AppleIDs.
This includes obtaining any required user consent before youassociate any directly identifying personal information with an anonymized AppleID. When using Firebase Authentication, this may include the followingactions:
To authenticate with an Apple account, first sign the user in to their Appleaccount using Apple's AuthenticationServices framework,and then use the ID token from Apple's response to create a FirebaseAuthCredential object:
You will send the SHA256 hash of the nonce with your sign-in request, whichApple will pass unchanged in the response. Firebase validates the responseby hashing the original nonce and comparing it to the value passed by Apple.
Handle Apple's response in your implementation ofASAuthorizationControllerDelegate. If sign-in was successful, use the IDtoken from Apple's response with the unhashed nonce to authenticate withFirebase:
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