Apple accessibility to see what they might suggest.
>
> Apple was helpful to me when my husband passed, but then I knew the codes to
> his Apple stuff.
>
> Eileen
>
> From: Michael Busboom <>
> Sent: Tuesday, December 29, 2020 10:03 AM
> To: 'Adrian Leong&
, December 29, 2020 10:03 AM
To: 'Adrian Leong' via MacVisionaries
Subject: Recovering data from iPads
Hello everyone,
Recently a very close friend of mine died, and I inherited two iPads that he
and his wife owned. One of the iPads is three years old, and the other is five
or six years ol
Yes, it also said the magic words “it may be possible”, which also means it may
not be possible.
There is another possibility that the article doesn’t mention. If you have the
original receipt from when the device in question was purchased, then Apple can
help access a locked device. Again, t
Brad,
Near the end of the article, there was mention that you could get in touch with
Apple support if you are the person with power of attorney and you have a death
certificate and you have the email address of the person for the login. I
believe the requester had at least two of those three it
This article pretty much says that if you don’t have the deceased individual's
AppleID password or device passcode, you can’t access anything.
The rest of the article is full of “it may be possible” and other filler that
doesn’t provide any real help once the individual has passed.
- Brad -
On
Believe it or not, there’s an article about this. Unfortunately, it’s from a
more which means it will be full of ads. But here is the link:
https://www.imore.com/how-access-iphone-content-when-someone-passes-away
Sent from my iPhone
> On Dec 29, 2020, at 10:03 AM, Michael Busboom wrote:
>
>
Hello everyone,
Recently a very close friend of mine died, and I inherited two iPads that he
and his wife owned. One of the iPads is three years old, and the other is five
or six years old. On one of the iPads, there are apparently a lot of pictures
that family members would like to have, pro