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Author Topic: PSA: Apple Email Asks Users Who Signed Up for Apple Card Invite to Provide Correct Apple ID, Even if They Did Already  (Read 448 times)
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« on: August 17, 2019, 04:05:09 pm »

PSA: Apple Email Asks Users Who Signed Up for Apple Card Invite to Provide Correct Apple ID, Even if They Did Already

Apple customers who registered their interest in gaining early access to Apple Card were left confused last night after receiving an email from Apple asking for their Apple ID, despite having already provided it.





<img src="" alt="" width="735" height="703" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-705604" />


Since early August, Apple users have been signing up on Apple's website to be notified early about the release of <!---->Apple Card<!---->. Apple has since sent out email invitations for an "Apple Card Preview" to some of those customers. However, it looks as though an error has cropped up in Apple's invite system as the second wave of customers starts to be processed.





The latest Apple email sent out to customers claims that their "early-access invitation is waiting," but that the email address they used when they originally signed up for an <!---->Apple Card<!----> invite doesn't match an existing Apple ID on record. The message reads:


You wanted to be one of the first to get <!---->Apple Card<!----> — a new kind of credit card created by Apple, not a bank. Good news: Here's your chance to experience <!---->Apple Card<!----> before everybody else, so you can help us get ready for the public launch. Your early access invitation is waiting, but we need your Apple ID to send it. The email address you provided does not match an Apple ID signed in to iCloud. Just complete a few simple steps so we can send your invitation.
The email then provides steps for the user to check their Apple ID on iPhone and re-enter it at www.apple.com/apple-card to ensure they get notified, after which "invitations may take up to 48 hours to arrive."





While it's important to stay vigilant and report phishing attempts to Apple, in this case the "Notify Me" link provided in the email checks out and the raw email headers show the sender address is genuinely from Apple.





There are multiple reports on Reddit of people receiving the email who are 100 percent sure they signed up with the correct Apple ID email address. MacRumors also received the email – we're also very confident the right address was used – which suggests an erroneous communication has been sent out to hundreds, if not thousands of users, causing initial excitement swiftly followed by bemusement.





<center><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Got my email to sign up for <!---->Apple Card<!----> today and it’s saying my <!---->iCloud<!----> email is incorrect yet it’s the one they emailed the invite to and the only <!---->iCloud<!----> account I’ve ever had in over a decade+. I saw on reddit lots ppl w same issue. Will it be fixed soon? @Apple @AppleSupport</p>&mdash; TJ (@solongtj) August 14, 2019 <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script></center>


Several users have contacted Apple Support, who are apparently aware of the issue and it has been forwarded to the <!---->Apple Card<!----> engineering team. Still, it's worth noting that some users may have also received the email for the right reason – because they didn't use the email address associated with their Apple account.





Needless to say, if you did sign up for the <!---->Apple Card<!----> invitation, make sure you used the proper Apple ID email address. If you can't remember whether you did or not, consider signing up again, otherwise it could delay your invitation by a few days.





Once customers receive their actual email invitation to the <!---->Apple Card<!----> Preview, they can sign up for <!---->Apple Card<!----> in the Wallet app on the iPhone or by going to Settings > Wallet & Apple Pay on the iPad.





<!---->Apple Card<!----> is limited to the United States at the current time, but may expand to additional countries in the near future. Apple is already in talks with European regulators, and has trademarked <!---->Apple Card<!----> in Europe, Hong Kong, and Canada.

<div class="linkback">Tag: Apple Card</div>
This article, &quot;PSA: Apple Email Asks Users Who Signed Up for Apple Card Invite to Provide Correct Apple ID, Even if They Did Already&quot; first appeared on MacRumors.com

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Source: PSA: Apple Email Asks Users Who Signed Up for Apple Card Invite to Provide Correct Apple ID, Even if They Did Already
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