A fraud of an article. It is not about an “iPhone setting” as the headline lyingly blasts. The skillfull writing serves to ramp up the suspense, but gives us no trustworthy information. We are genuinely afraid for her, and ready and willing to blame her danger on the iPhone. But it’s not the iPhone that is the source of the danger. It’s possibly an app, called AirDrop.
The writer of the article is just a typical incompetent journalist trying to make a buck, so this is not surprising.
Agree. But the article pretty much totally debunks the notion that AirDrop was the problem, then goes on to give info about how to disable AirDrop even when it is not the cause of the problem.
Trash journalism by a know-nothing “reporter.”