Is my iPhone hacked?

I came across a link that took me to a review but then redirected me to an "Apple Security Alert pop-up," which then popped up a phone number which I did not call and slowed my phone down for a minute. My first reaction was to try and close out of safari, but it would not allow me to do so. It would randomly open the Apple wallet, Siri, and return to home screen, all while being extremely glitchy and slow. After a few attempts at turning my iPhone 13 off and on, it finally went away, and my phone seemed to return to normal. After all that, I cleared my history and data, and even downloaded TotalAV to check for malware. While it is working normally now, and I haven't found anything suspicious, my main concern is why it glitched out like that? Is there anything else I should do?




[Re-Titled by Moderator]


iPhone 13, iOS 16

Posted on May 31, 2023 03:03 PM

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Posted on Jun 29, 2023 01:21 PM

Tricking network providers into issuing eSIMs to crooks is new, SIM cloning has been around for years.

Yes I agree, physical SIM with PIN is the most secure but Apple has a moratorium on SIM trays.


I doubt if VPN will protect against SIM fraud or phishing despite the claims. They sure as heck mess up iphones and Watches.

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jun 29, 2023 01:21 PM in response to cici105

Tricking network providers into issuing eSIMs to crooks is new, SIM cloning has been around for years.

Yes I agree, physical SIM with PIN is the most secure but Apple has a moratorium on SIM trays.


I doubt if VPN will protect against SIM fraud or phishing despite the claims. They sure as heck mess up iphones and Watches.

Jun 29, 2023 11:58 AM in response to cici105

There is no software in a SIM to be hacked. It is simply an ID.

Nobody can access data on an iphone that way.

NEVER use an App Store VPN on a iphone unless you want your data used by the VPN provider and you are happy for slow data traffic, problems with Wi-Fi, App Store etc.

Don't believe the snake oil advertising.

Just hang around here and see what damage VPNs do.


May 31, 2023 03:16 PM in response to sillypancakes21

An iPhone cannot be hacked, nor its encrypted info accessed in any way from a website.


The the pop up was a scam, and may have been coded in such a way as to prevent it for going away and can cause the browser to lag.


If you did not click on anything else, and did not provide any info, your data is fine and your iPhone is not hacked.


There should be nothing else you need to do. Much less worry about your cards and data for a website scam.

Jun 29, 2023 09:49 AM in response to sillypancakes21

The iPhone cannot be backed but your SIM card can be through a simple text , thus giving control of iPhone to hacker. I know this to be a fact because mine has been relentlessly compromised by an ex in-law. It is frustrating to be violated by someone who has no ethics. The best way I know of how to stop this is to get another SIM card and lock it with a pin #, never open unknown text messages and use a vpn on phone.

Jun 29, 2023 12:49 PM in response to LD150

Of course there is no software on SIM but it is still a new technique called SIM cloning, splitting, simjacking, or SIM hijacking, used by fraudsters to get control of your phone number. With your phone number, hackers can take advantage of two-factor authentication to gain access to your bank accounts, social media accounts, texts, etc.. as for VPN’s for me it is better than nothing. We will see what the future brings next..

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Is my iPhone hacked?

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