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My ex-girlfriend uses my Apple ID to login to her iPad, do I have to give her my Apple ID password to reset it?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowHow can I find my Apple ID on my iPad?How can you reset security questions on an Apple ID when you have the password, but the security email is incorrect?Logged on to someone elses IPadForgotten Apple ID password and not receiving password reset emailTransfer content from one Apple ID to another?Cannot log in with Apple ID after performing password resetMy iMessages will not send to my friends, but I can send and receive (my friends included) to everyone elseWhy is Apple telling me to change my password after receiving a password reset email?Reset iPad when Apple ID no longer existsHow to reset Apple ID password without email access










21















She asked me to give her my Apple ID password to log out. But I don't want to share my password. She said she need that password to logout iPad.



Do I have to give her my password? What else can she do?










share|improve this question



















  • 25





    I would not give her the password! Have her meet you in a public place with the device and you sign out.

    – user3439894
    yesterday






  • 1





    Does this Apple ID have any apps, music, movies, TV or whatever that cost money, and she wants to keep on this iPad?

    – Harper
    yesterday







  • 1





    Is remote reset an option? support.apple.com/kb/ph2701?locale=en_US

    – Pedro Lobito
    yesterday






  • 2





    Use 'Find my iPad', and do a remote wipe on it. No need to meet, and she doesn't need your password.

    – PeteCon
    13 hours ago















21















She asked me to give her my Apple ID password to log out. But I don't want to share my password. She said she need that password to logout iPad.



Do I have to give her my password? What else can she do?










share|improve this question



















  • 25





    I would not give her the password! Have her meet you in a public place with the device and you sign out.

    – user3439894
    yesterday






  • 1





    Does this Apple ID have any apps, music, movies, TV or whatever that cost money, and she wants to keep on this iPad?

    – Harper
    yesterday







  • 1





    Is remote reset an option? support.apple.com/kb/ph2701?locale=en_US

    – Pedro Lobito
    yesterday






  • 2





    Use 'Find my iPad', and do a remote wipe on it. No need to meet, and she doesn't need your password.

    – PeteCon
    13 hours ago













21












21








21


2






She asked me to give her my Apple ID password to log out. But I don't want to share my password. She said she need that password to logout iPad.



Do I have to give her my password? What else can she do?










share|improve this question
















She asked me to give her my Apple ID password to log out. But I don't want to share my password. She said she need that password to logout iPad.



Do I have to give her my password? What else can she do?







apple-id






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









Nimesh Neema

16.2k74679




16.2k74679










asked yesterday









AGamePlayerAGamePlayer

4871718




4871718







  • 25





    I would not give her the password! Have her meet you in a public place with the device and you sign out.

    – user3439894
    yesterday






  • 1





    Does this Apple ID have any apps, music, movies, TV or whatever that cost money, and she wants to keep on this iPad?

    – Harper
    yesterday







  • 1





    Is remote reset an option? support.apple.com/kb/ph2701?locale=en_US

    – Pedro Lobito
    yesterday






  • 2





    Use 'Find my iPad', and do a remote wipe on it. No need to meet, and she doesn't need your password.

    – PeteCon
    13 hours ago












  • 25





    I would not give her the password! Have her meet you in a public place with the device and you sign out.

    – user3439894
    yesterday






  • 1





    Does this Apple ID have any apps, music, movies, TV or whatever that cost money, and she wants to keep on this iPad?

    – Harper
    yesterday







  • 1





    Is remote reset an option? support.apple.com/kb/ph2701?locale=en_US

    – Pedro Lobito
    yesterday






  • 2





    Use 'Find my iPad', and do a remote wipe on it. No need to meet, and she doesn't need your password.

    – PeteCon
    13 hours ago







25




25





I would not give her the password! Have her meet you in a public place with the device and you sign out.

– user3439894
yesterday





I would not give her the password! Have her meet you in a public place with the device and you sign out.

– user3439894
yesterday




1




1





Does this Apple ID have any apps, music, movies, TV or whatever that cost money, and she wants to keep on this iPad?

– Harper
yesterday






Does this Apple ID have any apps, music, movies, TV or whatever that cost money, and she wants to keep on this iPad?

– Harper
yesterday





1




1





Is remote reset an option? support.apple.com/kb/ph2701?locale=en_US

– Pedro Lobito
yesterday





Is remote reset an option? support.apple.com/kb/ph2701?locale=en_US

– Pedro Lobito
yesterday




2




2





Use 'Find my iPad', and do a remote wipe on it. No need to meet, and she doesn't need your password.

– PeteCon
13 hours ago





Use 'Find my iPad', and do a remote wipe on it. No need to meet, and she doesn't need your password.

– PeteCon
13 hours ago










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















23














Yes, it's required to enter Apple ID password and sign out before reseting an iOS device. Additionally, Find My iPhone is disabled too (if enabled) when resetting an iOS device.



  • Sign out of iCloud on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Apple TV, or Mac

This is to prevent any unauthorised signing out from iOS device.



As very nicely and cautiously noted by @SolarMike, sharing the password may be potentially dangerous unless you trust the person with it. You should get the iPad in person, enter the password, sign out and reset it yourself.



You can share the password with her, and let her sign out. Once signed out, check if the device is removed from your account by going to iCloud settings on any one of your other iOS/macOS devices or by going to iCloud website.



As a precautionary measure, you should also changed the password once your ex-girlfriend's device is removed successfully from your account.




Important Note



It's crucial to note on this occasion, that you enable Two-factor authentication for your Apple ID. It helps in tracking and identifying unintended login attempts using your Apple ID. Having Two-factor authentication requires someone with access to your password to approach you to get the code, thereby ensuring security of your account.



Any login attempt is notified to you on your trusted device(s) with information regarding device type and location where the login is attempted. For more details, refer to the Apple Support article:



  • Two-factor authentication for Apple ID





share|improve this answer




















  • 4





    I voted for this - more info than my answer...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday











  • Alternatively, change the password and then change it back afterwards

    – somebody
    yesterday






  • 14





    @somebody so as soon as you give that or any password to your account - the other person can change it and you are now locked out... Don't do it...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday







  • 4





    @somebody You may not be able to do it yourself. Regardless of your plans to "change it back afterwards", how do you know you'll be able to do that? That requires trust. The premise of the question is that trust is lacking.

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday






  • 2





    @somebody let's hypothetically assume she does want to lock out the OP. So, you send your altered password to her (which makes no difference, it's still the active password for the account, and you should only be using passwords for one site at a time, so no need to change it for protection), and then what? You wait a bit and change it back? You have two outcomes: you are too soon and she texts/calls and says the password won't work; or you are too late and she changed the password on you. So your alternative adds ZERO safety, and it allows her complete, unrestricted access.

    – Aethenosity
    yesterday



















70














Don’t just give the password - that gives full access to your account - she could change the password on you... Make it that you enter the password and reset... Either meet or she sends you the iPad...






share|improve this answer


















  • 8





    +1 because the answer highlights the risk

    – n1000
    yesterday


















12














The only way to do it is do it yourself. You need to log out, log out of iCloud, and turn off "Find My iPad". Then she can create her own AppleID and log in with it.



I'd recommend to make an appointment at an Apple Store where you both meet, then you will have someone there who (a) goes through the procedure without getting anything wrong (I can't quite guarantee that my instructions are 100% right), and (b) who can make sure that nobody does anything nefarious (like making sure all you do is entering the password, and making sure your AppleId is gone in the end), and who (c) can help her setting up her own AppleId.






share|improve this answer























  • The advice about the Apple Store is right on. However, she cannot simply log you out and turn off "Find my iPad", otherwise, every thief would do that 60 seconds after they steal your iPad.

    – Harper
    3 hours ago



















7














NO!



You absolutely do not have to give her your Apple ID password to reset it. Normally, if you reset it from the device, yes, you do have to enter the Apple ID password to the Apple ID associated with the device, but you do not have to reset it from the device. If you have a computer running macOS (a MacBook, iMac, etc.) or a computer running Windows with iTunes installed, then the following method will not require you to enter your Apple ID password and will still completely destroy all data on the iPad. First, turn the iPad off (hold the lock button until a slider comes up on the screen; slide the slider). Then, once the device has shut down, hold the lock button and the home button simultaneously and continue holding not until the Apple logo appears, but until the recovery mode screen appears (it usually consists of a Lightning cable and an iTunes logo). Then, if you are using a Windows computer, install iTunes on it at this link. Macs have it preinstalled. Plug in the iPad and near the top left corner, you'll see a button that looks like an iPad. If you don't see it at first, just give it a minute. It usually doesn't show up instantly. Once you find the button, click it. Then, in the menu that comes up, click "Restore iPad..." and follow the steps that appear on screen.



Hope this helped!






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.



























    6














    TLDR: Here's why this matters.



    Sharing the password is out of the question. But first let's fully discuss the problem scope.



    An iPad needs an Apple Account. I gather you figured out you can't go far with an iPad without one. Doing so also activates features like "Find My iPad" and iCloud storage and backup, which is free, so why not? App and media purchases are bound to the account not the device, so you can take your apps/media with you when you change devices.



    Each human needs their own Apple Account. So when she buy media or "buys" free apps, they're on her account. I gather she hasn't done much of that because there are password challenges for pay items, but still.



    But don't accidentally create two Apple accounts. Everyone I know has two, because of confusion when setting up a new device. Apple won't allow merging of accounts, and you don't want some purchases on one account and some on another. So she should try in advance to log into icloud.com with a web browser, with past emails. If she definitely doesn't have an Apple account, she should set one up in advance.



    Back up her data



    Creating her own Apple account and having her iPad on that is a good thing. But she should be clear all her apps will disappear (she can just re-"buy" them), and created content may disappear.



    Also, look in Settings/Mail, Contacts, Calendars to see where notes, contacts, and some data actually lives; if it says 'iCloud' she'll lose it, but she can set up a Gmail account and the Apple Store can help her move it there. That will need to be done before she disconnects from your Apple ID.



    enter image description here



    Uh-oh.



    Do the switch



    Then you need to get together with her and sign it out of your account and bind it to her [new?] account. It may seem weird that you need to "sign in to sign out", but that's an anti-theft feature. Part of resetting is unhooking "Find My iPad" from your account, something a thief would be very keen on doing obviously. So Apple requires you to prove you're you, hence the need for your password. This recently saved a friend's iPad (it was found with the Activation Lock on).



    Doing this "at the Apple Store" gives you a better shot of getting help if you get stuck.






    share|improve this answer

























    • I can't vote down on this but I would, it is full of oppinion and story telling unrelated to the question at hand. Also, you are wrong about Apple encouraging you to create a new account. If you go to the Apple Store, they will pretty much force you to use your existing id and have now tied every thing from logging into you computer to watching Netflix require you to use your Apple ID. If they really wanted you to create an new id to make you buy stuff twice, it would pretty make everything they show a keynote not work.

      – Joe Tyman
      9 hours ago






    • 1





      @Joe Welcome to StackExchange. This is a Q&A platform where answerers are invited to improve their answers; that is the purpose of comments and in fact, that's what you just did. And I hear what you say and I improved the answer. That's how the rest of StackExchange works; it's nowhere near as salty as SO. I hope you see that a constructive comment goes much farther toward getting what you want. Assuming, of course, you want to persuade. I for one basically never downvote unless an answer is dangerous.

      – Harper
      8 hours ago



















    5














    This is kinda speculative, but can you kick her ipad off your account through your apple ID?



    I know when I go into my phone, there's an entry for my computer there (apple account, my devices) and an option to remove the computer from my account. It doesn't require proximity or other access to the computer. And Nimeesh Neema mentions going into your account to check if her ipad's been removed [after getting it off].



    So you might be able to log into your account, check your devices, and find an option to remove this device from your account. I don't know what exactly it'll do to the ipad or what needs to be done to get in functional again, but if it somehow doesn't reset neatly she can take it to an apple store and figure it out. I suppose it's then her business to set up her own apple ID to get it working again.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Megha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.




















    • I think you're right, you can do that, but it would be a rougher transition for her because of the inability to back up her data and do a smooth transition.

      – Harper
      3 hours ago









    protected by Community 7 hours ago



    Thank you for your interest in this question.
    Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



    Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














    6 Answers
    6






    active

    oldest

    votes








    6 Answers
    6






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    23














    Yes, it's required to enter Apple ID password and sign out before reseting an iOS device. Additionally, Find My iPhone is disabled too (if enabled) when resetting an iOS device.



    • Sign out of iCloud on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Apple TV, or Mac

    This is to prevent any unauthorised signing out from iOS device.



    As very nicely and cautiously noted by @SolarMike, sharing the password may be potentially dangerous unless you trust the person with it. You should get the iPad in person, enter the password, sign out and reset it yourself.



    You can share the password with her, and let her sign out. Once signed out, check if the device is removed from your account by going to iCloud settings on any one of your other iOS/macOS devices or by going to iCloud website.



    As a precautionary measure, you should also changed the password once your ex-girlfriend's device is removed successfully from your account.




    Important Note



    It's crucial to note on this occasion, that you enable Two-factor authentication for your Apple ID. It helps in tracking and identifying unintended login attempts using your Apple ID. Having Two-factor authentication requires someone with access to your password to approach you to get the code, thereby ensuring security of your account.



    Any login attempt is notified to you on your trusted device(s) with information regarding device type and location where the login is attempted. For more details, refer to the Apple Support article:



    • Two-factor authentication for Apple ID





    share|improve this answer




















    • 4





      I voted for this - more info than my answer...

      – Solar Mike
      yesterday











    • Alternatively, change the password and then change it back afterwards

      – somebody
      yesterday






    • 14





      @somebody so as soon as you give that or any password to your account - the other person can change it and you are now locked out... Don't do it...

      – Solar Mike
      yesterday







    • 4





      @somebody You may not be able to do it yourself. Regardless of your plans to "change it back afterwards", how do you know you'll be able to do that? That requires trust. The premise of the question is that trust is lacking.

      – Lightness Races in Orbit
      yesterday






    • 2





      @somebody let's hypothetically assume she does want to lock out the OP. So, you send your altered password to her (which makes no difference, it's still the active password for the account, and you should only be using passwords for one site at a time, so no need to change it for protection), and then what? You wait a bit and change it back? You have two outcomes: you are too soon and she texts/calls and says the password won't work; or you are too late and she changed the password on you. So your alternative adds ZERO safety, and it allows her complete, unrestricted access.

      – Aethenosity
      yesterday
















    23














    Yes, it's required to enter Apple ID password and sign out before reseting an iOS device. Additionally, Find My iPhone is disabled too (if enabled) when resetting an iOS device.



    • Sign out of iCloud on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Apple TV, or Mac

    This is to prevent any unauthorised signing out from iOS device.



    As very nicely and cautiously noted by @SolarMike, sharing the password may be potentially dangerous unless you trust the person with it. You should get the iPad in person, enter the password, sign out and reset it yourself.



    You can share the password with her, and let her sign out. Once signed out, check if the device is removed from your account by going to iCloud settings on any one of your other iOS/macOS devices or by going to iCloud website.



    As a precautionary measure, you should also changed the password once your ex-girlfriend's device is removed successfully from your account.




    Important Note



    It's crucial to note on this occasion, that you enable Two-factor authentication for your Apple ID. It helps in tracking and identifying unintended login attempts using your Apple ID. Having Two-factor authentication requires someone with access to your password to approach you to get the code, thereby ensuring security of your account.



    Any login attempt is notified to you on your trusted device(s) with information regarding device type and location where the login is attempted. For more details, refer to the Apple Support article:



    • Two-factor authentication for Apple ID





    share|improve this answer




















    • 4





      I voted for this - more info than my answer...

      – Solar Mike
      yesterday











    • Alternatively, change the password and then change it back afterwards

      – somebody
      yesterday






    • 14





      @somebody so as soon as you give that or any password to your account - the other person can change it and you are now locked out... Don't do it...

      – Solar Mike
      yesterday







    • 4





      @somebody You may not be able to do it yourself. Regardless of your plans to "change it back afterwards", how do you know you'll be able to do that? That requires trust. The premise of the question is that trust is lacking.

      – Lightness Races in Orbit
      yesterday






    • 2





      @somebody let's hypothetically assume she does want to lock out the OP. So, you send your altered password to her (which makes no difference, it's still the active password for the account, and you should only be using passwords for one site at a time, so no need to change it for protection), and then what? You wait a bit and change it back? You have two outcomes: you are too soon and she texts/calls and says the password won't work; or you are too late and she changed the password on you. So your alternative adds ZERO safety, and it allows her complete, unrestricted access.

      – Aethenosity
      yesterday














    23












    23








    23







    Yes, it's required to enter Apple ID password and sign out before reseting an iOS device. Additionally, Find My iPhone is disabled too (if enabled) when resetting an iOS device.



    • Sign out of iCloud on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Apple TV, or Mac

    This is to prevent any unauthorised signing out from iOS device.



    As very nicely and cautiously noted by @SolarMike, sharing the password may be potentially dangerous unless you trust the person with it. You should get the iPad in person, enter the password, sign out and reset it yourself.



    You can share the password with her, and let her sign out. Once signed out, check if the device is removed from your account by going to iCloud settings on any one of your other iOS/macOS devices or by going to iCloud website.



    As a precautionary measure, you should also changed the password once your ex-girlfriend's device is removed successfully from your account.




    Important Note



    It's crucial to note on this occasion, that you enable Two-factor authentication for your Apple ID. It helps in tracking and identifying unintended login attempts using your Apple ID. Having Two-factor authentication requires someone with access to your password to approach you to get the code, thereby ensuring security of your account.



    Any login attempt is notified to you on your trusted device(s) with information regarding device type and location where the login is attempted. For more details, refer to the Apple Support article:



    • Two-factor authentication for Apple ID





    share|improve this answer















    Yes, it's required to enter Apple ID password and sign out before reseting an iOS device. Additionally, Find My iPhone is disabled too (if enabled) when resetting an iOS device.



    • Sign out of iCloud on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Apple TV, or Mac

    This is to prevent any unauthorised signing out from iOS device.



    As very nicely and cautiously noted by @SolarMike, sharing the password may be potentially dangerous unless you trust the person with it. You should get the iPad in person, enter the password, sign out and reset it yourself.



    You can share the password with her, and let her sign out. Once signed out, check if the device is removed from your account by going to iCloud settings on any one of your other iOS/macOS devices or by going to iCloud website.



    As a precautionary measure, you should also changed the password once your ex-girlfriend's device is removed successfully from your account.




    Important Note



    It's crucial to note on this occasion, that you enable Two-factor authentication for your Apple ID. It helps in tracking and identifying unintended login attempts using your Apple ID. Having Two-factor authentication requires someone with access to your password to approach you to get the code, thereby ensuring security of your account.



    Any login attempt is notified to you on your trusted device(s) with information regarding device type and location where the login is attempted. For more details, refer to the Apple Support article:



    • Two-factor authentication for Apple ID






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 19 hours ago

























    answered yesterday









    Nimesh NeemaNimesh Neema

    16.2k74679




    16.2k74679







    • 4





      I voted for this - more info than my answer...

      – Solar Mike
      yesterday











    • Alternatively, change the password and then change it back afterwards

      – somebody
      yesterday






    • 14





      @somebody so as soon as you give that or any password to your account - the other person can change it and you are now locked out... Don't do it...

      – Solar Mike
      yesterday







    • 4





      @somebody You may not be able to do it yourself. Regardless of your plans to "change it back afterwards", how do you know you'll be able to do that? That requires trust. The premise of the question is that trust is lacking.

      – Lightness Races in Orbit
      yesterday






    • 2





      @somebody let's hypothetically assume she does want to lock out the OP. So, you send your altered password to her (which makes no difference, it's still the active password for the account, and you should only be using passwords for one site at a time, so no need to change it for protection), and then what? You wait a bit and change it back? You have two outcomes: you are too soon and she texts/calls and says the password won't work; or you are too late and she changed the password on you. So your alternative adds ZERO safety, and it allows her complete, unrestricted access.

      – Aethenosity
      yesterday













    • 4





      I voted for this - more info than my answer...

      – Solar Mike
      yesterday











    • Alternatively, change the password and then change it back afterwards

      – somebody
      yesterday






    • 14





      @somebody so as soon as you give that or any password to your account - the other person can change it and you are now locked out... Don't do it...

      – Solar Mike
      yesterday







    • 4





      @somebody You may not be able to do it yourself. Regardless of your plans to "change it back afterwards", how do you know you'll be able to do that? That requires trust. The premise of the question is that trust is lacking.

      – Lightness Races in Orbit
      yesterday






    • 2





      @somebody let's hypothetically assume she does want to lock out the OP. So, you send your altered password to her (which makes no difference, it's still the active password for the account, and you should only be using passwords for one site at a time, so no need to change it for protection), and then what? You wait a bit and change it back? You have two outcomes: you are too soon and she texts/calls and says the password won't work; or you are too late and she changed the password on you. So your alternative adds ZERO safety, and it allows her complete, unrestricted access.

      – Aethenosity
      yesterday








    4




    4





    I voted for this - more info than my answer...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday





    I voted for this - more info than my answer...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday













    Alternatively, change the password and then change it back afterwards

    – somebody
    yesterday





    Alternatively, change the password and then change it back afterwards

    – somebody
    yesterday




    14




    14





    @somebody so as soon as you give that or any password to your account - the other person can change it and you are now locked out... Don't do it...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday






    @somebody so as soon as you give that or any password to your account - the other person can change it and you are now locked out... Don't do it...

    – Solar Mike
    yesterday





    4




    4





    @somebody You may not be able to do it yourself. Regardless of your plans to "change it back afterwards", how do you know you'll be able to do that? That requires trust. The premise of the question is that trust is lacking.

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday





    @somebody You may not be able to do it yourself. Regardless of your plans to "change it back afterwards", how do you know you'll be able to do that? That requires trust. The premise of the question is that trust is lacking.

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday




    2




    2





    @somebody let's hypothetically assume she does want to lock out the OP. So, you send your altered password to her (which makes no difference, it's still the active password for the account, and you should only be using passwords for one site at a time, so no need to change it for protection), and then what? You wait a bit and change it back? You have two outcomes: you are too soon and she texts/calls and says the password won't work; or you are too late and she changed the password on you. So your alternative adds ZERO safety, and it allows her complete, unrestricted access.

    – Aethenosity
    yesterday






    @somebody let's hypothetically assume she does want to lock out the OP. So, you send your altered password to her (which makes no difference, it's still the active password for the account, and you should only be using passwords for one site at a time, so no need to change it for protection), and then what? You wait a bit and change it back? You have two outcomes: you are too soon and she texts/calls and says the password won't work; or you are too late and she changed the password on you. So your alternative adds ZERO safety, and it allows her complete, unrestricted access.

    – Aethenosity
    yesterday














    70














    Don’t just give the password - that gives full access to your account - she could change the password on you... Make it that you enter the password and reset... Either meet or she sends you the iPad...






    share|improve this answer


















    • 8





      +1 because the answer highlights the risk

      – n1000
      yesterday















    70














    Don’t just give the password - that gives full access to your account - she could change the password on you... Make it that you enter the password and reset... Either meet or she sends you the iPad...






    share|improve this answer


















    • 8





      +1 because the answer highlights the risk

      – n1000
      yesterday













    70












    70








    70







    Don’t just give the password - that gives full access to your account - she could change the password on you... Make it that you enter the password and reset... Either meet or she sends you the iPad...






    share|improve this answer













    Don’t just give the password - that gives full access to your account - she could change the password on you... Make it that you enter the password and reset... Either meet or she sends you the iPad...







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered yesterday









    Solar MikeSolar Mike

    1,8603817




    1,8603817







    • 8





      +1 because the answer highlights the risk

      – n1000
      yesterday












    • 8





      +1 because the answer highlights the risk

      – n1000
      yesterday







    8




    8





    +1 because the answer highlights the risk

    – n1000
    yesterday





    +1 because the answer highlights the risk

    – n1000
    yesterday











    12














    The only way to do it is do it yourself. You need to log out, log out of iCloud, and turn off "Find My iPad". Then she can create her own AppleID and log in with it.



    I'd recommend to make an appointment at an Apple Store where you both meet, then you will have someone there who (a) goes through the procedure without getting anything wrong (I can't quite guarantee that my instructions are 100% right), and (b) who can make sure that nobody does anything nefarious (like making sure all you do is entering the password, and making sure your AppleId is gone in the end), and who (c) can help her setting up her own AppleId.






    share|improve this answer























    • The advice about the Apple Store is right on. However, she cannot simply log you out and turn off "Find my iPad", otherwise, every thief would do that 60 seconds after they steal your iPad.

      – Harper
      3 hours ago
















    12














    The only way to do it is do it yourself. You need to log out, log out of iCloud, and turn off "Find My iPad". Then she can create her own AppleID and log in with it.



    I'd recommend to make an appointment at an Apple Store where you both meet, then you will have someone there who (a) goes through the procedure without getting anything wrong (I can't quite guarantee that my instructions are 100% right), and (b) who can make sure that nobody does anything nefarious (like making sure all you do is entering the password, and making sure your AppleId is gone in the end), and who (c) can help her setting up her own AppleId.






    share|improve this answer























    • The advice about the Apple Store is right on. However, she cannot simply log you out and turn off "Find my iPad", otherwise, every thief would do that 60 seconds after they steal your iPad.

      – Harper
      3 hours ago














    12












    12








    12







    The only way to do it is do it yourself. You need to log out, log out of iCloud, and turn off "Find My iPad". Then she can create her own AppleID and log in with it.



    I'd recommend to make an appointment at an Apple Store where you both meet, then you will have someone there who (a) goes through the procedure without getting anything wrong (I can't quite guarantee that my instructions are 100% right), and (b) who can make sure that nobody does anything nefarious (like making sure all you do is entering the password, and making sure your AppleId is gone in the end), and who (c) can help her setting up her own AppleId.






    share|improve this answer













    The only way to do it is do it yourself. You need to log out, log out of iCloud, and turn off "Find My iPad". Then she can create her own AppleID and log in with it.



    I'd recommend to make an appointment at an Apple Store where you both meet, then you will have someone there who (a) goes through the procedure without getting anything wrong (I can't quite guarantee that my instructions are 100% right), and (b) who can make sure that nobody does anything nefarious (like making sure all you do is entering the password, and making sure your AppleId is gone in the end), and who (c) can help her setting up her own AppleId.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered yesterday









    gnasher729gnasher729

    54927




    54927












    • The advice about the Apple Store is right on. However, she cannot simply log you out and turn off "Find my iPad", otherwise, every thief would do that 60 seconds after they steal your iPad.

      – Harper
      3 hours ago


















    • The advice about the Apple Store is right on. However, she cannot simply log you out and turn off "Find my iPad", otherwise, every thief would do that 60 seconds after they steal your iPad.

      – Harper
      3 hours ago

















    The advice about the Apple Store is right on. However, she cannot simply log you out and turn off "Find my iPad", otherwise, every thief would do that 60 seconds after they steal your iPad.

    – Harper
    3 hours ago






    The advice about the Apple Store is right on. However, she cannot simply log you out and turn off "Find my iPad", otherwise, every thief would do that 60 seconds after they steal your iPad.

    – Harper
    3 hours ago












    7














    NO!



    You absolutely do not have to give her your Apple ID password to reset it. Normally, if you reset it from the device, yes, you do have to enter the Apple ID password to the Apple ID associated with the device, but you do not have to reset it from the device. If you have a computer running macOS (a MacBook, iMac, etc.) or a computer running Windows with iTunes installed, then the following method will not require you to enter your Apple ID password and will still completely destroy all data on the iPad. First, turn the iPad off (hold the lock button until a slider comes up on the screen; slide the slider). Then, once the device has shut down, hold the lock button and the home button simultaneously and continue holding not until the Apple logo appears, but until the recovery mode screen appears (it usually consists of a Lightning cable and an iTunes logo). Then, if you are using a Windows computer, install iTunes on it at this link. Macs have it preinstalled. Plug in the iPad and near the top left corner, you'll see a button that looks like an iPad. If you don't see it at first, just give it a minute. It usually doesn't show up instantly. Once you find the button, click it. Then, in the menu that comes up, click "Restore iPad..." and follow the steps that appear on screen.



    Hope this helped!






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.
























      7














      NO!



      You absolutely do not have to give her your Apple ID password to reset it. Normally, if you reset it from the device, yes, you do have to enter the Apple ID password to the Apple ID associated with the device, but you do not have to reset it from the device. If you have a computer running macOS (a MacBook, iMac, etc.) or a computer running Windows with iTunes installed, then the following method will not require you to enter your Apple ID password and will still completely destroy all data on the iPad. First, turn the iPad off (hold the lock button until a slider comes up on the screen; slide the slider). Then, once the device has shut down, hold the lock button and the home button simultaneously and continue holding not until the Apple logo appears, but until the recovery mode screen appears (it usually consists of a Lightning cable and an iTunes logo). Then, if you are using a Windows computer, install iTunes on it at this link. Macs have it preinstalled. Plug in the iPad and near the top left corner, you'll see a button that looks like an iPad. If you don't see it at first, just give it a minute. It usually doesn't show up instantly. Once you find the button, click it. Then, in the menu that comes up, click "Restore iPad..." and follow the steps that appear on screen.



      Hope this helped!






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















        7












        7








        7







        NO!



        You absolutely do not have to give her your Apple ID password to reset it. Normally, if you reset it from the device, yes, you do have to enter the Apple ID password to the Apple ID associated with the device, but you do not have to reset it from the device. If you have a computer running macOS (a MacBook, iMac, etc.) or a computer running Windows with iTunes installed, then the following method will not require you to enter your Apple ID password and will still completely destroy all data on the iPad. First, turn the iPad off (hold the lock button until a slider comes up on the screen; slide the slider). Then, once the device has shut down, hold the lock button and the home button simultaneously and continue holding not until the Apple logo appears, but until the recovery mode screen appears (it usually consists of a Lightning cable and an iTunes logo). Then, if you are using a Windows computer, install iTunes on it at this link. Macs have it preinstalled. Plug in the iPad and near the top left corner, you'll see a button that looks like an iPad. If you don't see it at first, just give it a minute. It usually doesn't show up instantly. Once you find the button, click it. Then, in the menu that comes up, click "Restore iPad..." and follow the steps that appear on screen.



        Hope this helped!






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.










        NO!



        You absolutely do not have to give her your Apple ID password to reset it. Normally, if you reset it from the device, yes, you do have to enter the Apple ID password to the Apple ID associated with the device, but you do not have to reset it from the device. If you have a computer running macOS (a MacBook, iMac, etc.) or a computer running Windows with iTunes installed, then the following method will not require you to enter your Apple ID password and will still completely destroy all data on the iPad. First, turn the iPad off (hold the lock button until a slider comes up on the screen; slide the slider). Then, once the device has shut down, hold the lock button and the home button simultaneously and continue holding not until the Apple logo appears, but until the recovery mode screen appears (it usually consists of a Lightning cable and an iTunes logo). Then, if you are using a Windows computer, install iTunes on it at this link. Macs have it preinstalled. Plug in the iPad and near the top left corner, you'll see a button that looks like an iPad. If you don't see it at first, just give it a minute. It usually doesn't show up instantly. Once you find the button, click it. Then, in the menu that comes up, click "Restore iPad..." and follow the steps that appear on screen.



        Hope this helped!







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






        New contributor




        Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        answered yesterday









        Sir Wumpus IVSir Wumpus IV

        711




        711




        New contributor




        Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.





        New contributor





        Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






        Sir Wumpus IV is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.





















            6














            TLDR: Here's why this matters.



            Sharing the password is out of the question. But first let's fully discuss the problem scope.



            An iPad needs an Apple Account. I gather you figured out you can't go far with an iPad without one. Doing so also activates features like "Find My iPad" and iCloud storage and backup, which is free, so why not? App and media purchases are bound to the account not the device, so you can take your apps/media with you when you change devices.



            Each human needs their own Apple Account. So when she buy media or "buys" free apps, they're on her account. I gather she hasn't done much of that because there are password challenges for pay items, but still.



            But don't accidentally create two Apple accounts. Everyone I know has two, because of confusion when setting up a new device. Apple won't allow merging of accounts, and you don't want some purchases on one account and some on another. So she should try in advance to log into icloud.com with a web browser, with past emails. If she definitely doesn't have an Apple account, she should set one up in advance.



            Back up her data



            Creating her own Apple account and having her iPad on that is a good thing. But she should be clear all her apps will disappear (she can just re-"buy" them), and created content may disappear.



            Also, look in Settings/Mail, Contacts, Calendars to see where notes, contacts, and some data actually lives; if it says 'iCloud' she'll lose it, but she can set up a Gmail account and the Apple Store can help her move it there. That will need to be done before she disconnects from your Apple ID.



            enter image description here



            Uh-oh.



            Do the switch



            Then you need to get together with her and sign it out of your account and bind it to her [new?] account. It may seem weird that you need to "sign in to sign out", but that's an anti-theft feature. Part of resetting is unhooking "Find My iPad" from your account, something a thief would be very keen on doing obviously. So Apple requires you to prove you're you, hence the need for your password. This recently saved a friend's iPad (it was found with the Activation Lock on).



            Doing this "at the Apple Store" gives you a better shot of getting help if you get stuck.






            share|improve this answer

























            • I can't vote down on this but I would, it is full of oppinion and story telling unrelated to the question at hand. Also, you are wrong about Apple encouraging you to create a new account. If you go to the Apple Store, they will pretty much force you to use your existing id and have now tied every thing from logging into you computer to watching Netflix require you to use your Apple ID. If they really wanted you to create an new id to make you buy stuff twice, it would pretty make everything they show a keynote not work.

              – Joe Tyman
              9 hours ago






            • 1





              @Joe Welcome to StackExchange. This is a Q&A platform where answerers are invited to improve their answers; that is the purpose of comments and in fact, that's what you just did. And I hear what you say and I improved the answer. That's how the rest of StackExchange works; it's nowhere near as salty as SO. I hope you see that a constructive comment goes much farther toward getting what you want. Assuming, of course, you want to persuade. I for one basically never downvote unless an answer is dangerous.

              – Harper
              8 hours ago
















            6














            TLDR: Here's why this matters.



            Sharing the password is out of the question. But first let's fully discuss the problem scope.



            An iPad needs an Apple Account. I gather you figured out you can't go far with an iPad without one. Doing so also activates features like "Find My iPad" and iCloud storage and backup, which is free, so why not? App and media purchases are bound to the account not the device, so you can take your apps/media with you when you change devices.



            Each human needs their own Apple Account. So when she buy media or "buys" free apps, they're on her account. I gather she hasn't done much of that because there are password challenges for pay items, but still.



            But don't accidentally create two Apple accounts. Everyone I know has two, because of confusion when setting up a new device. Apple won't allow merging of accounts, and you don't want some purchases on one account and some on another. So she should try in advance to log into icloud.com with a web browser, with past emails. If she definitely doesn't have an Apple account, she should set one up in advance.



            Back up her data



            Creating her own Apple account and having her iPad on that is a good thing. But she should be clear all her apps will disappear (she can just re-"buy" them), and created content may disappear.



            Also, look in Settings/Mail, Contacts, Calendars to see where notes, contacts, and some data actually lives; if it says 'iCloud' she'll lose it, but she can set up a Gmail account and the Apple Store can help her move it there. That will need to be done before she disconnects from your Apple ID.



            enter image description here



            Uh-oh.



            Do the switch



            Then you need to get together with her and sign it out of your account and bind it to her [new?] account. It may seem weird that you need to "sign in to sign out", but that's an anti-theft feature. Part of resetting is unhooking "Find My iPad" from your account, something a thief would be very keen on doing obviously. So Apple requires you to prove you're you, hence the need for your password. This recently saved a friend's iPad (it was found with the Activation Lock on).



            Doing this "at the Apple Store" gives you a better shot of getting help if you get stuck.






            share|improve this answer

























            • I can't vote down on this but I would, it is full of oppinion and story telling unrelated to the question at hand. Also, you are wrong about Apple encouraging you to create a new account. If you go to the Apple Store, they will pretty much force you to use your existing id and have now tied every thing from logging into you computer to watching Netflix require you to use your Apple ID. If they really wanted you to create an new id to make you buy stuff twice, it would pretty make everything they show a keynote not work.

              – Joe Tyman
              9 hours ago






            • 1





              @Joe Welcome to StackExchange. This is a Q&A platform where answerers are invited to improve their answers; that is the purpose of comments and in fact, that's what you just did. And I hear what you say and I improved the answer. That's how the rest of StackExchange works; it's nowhere near as salty as SO. I hope you see that a constructive comment goes much farther toward getting what you want. Assuming, of course, you want to persuade. I for one basically never downvote unless an answer is dangerous.

              – Harper
              8 hours ago














            6












            6








            6







            TLDR: Here's why this matters.



            Sharing the password is out of the question. But first let's fully discuss the problem scope.



            An iPad needs an Apple Account. I gather you figured out you can't go far with an iPad without one. Doing so also activates features like "Find My iPad" and iCloud storage and backup, which is free, so why not? App and media purchases are bound to the account not the device, so you can take your apps/media with you when you change devices.



            Each human needs their own Apple Account. So when she buy media or "buys" free apps, they're on her account. I gather she hasn't done much of that because there are password challenges for pay items, but still.



            But don't accidentally create two Apple accounts. Everyone I know has two, because of confusion when setting up a new device. Apple won't allow merging of accounts, and you don't want some purchases on one account and some on another. So she should try in advance to log into icloud.com with a web browser, with past emails. If she definitely doesn't have an Apple account, she should set one up in advance.



            Back up her data



            Creating her own Apple account and having her iPad on that is a good thing. But she should be clear all her apps will disappear (she can just re-"buy" them), and created content may disappear.



            Also, look in Settings/Mail, Contacts, Calendars to see where notes, contacts, and some data actually lives; if it says 'iCloud' she'll lose it, but she can set up a Gmail account and the Apple Store can help her move it there. That will need to be done before she disconnects from your Apple ID.



            enter image description here



            Uh-oh.



            Do the switch



            Then you need to get together with her and sign it out of your account and bind it to her [new?] account. It may seem weird that you need to "sign in to sign out", but that's an anti-theft feature. Part of resetting is unhooking "Find My iPad" from your account, something a thief would be very keen on doing obviously. So Apple requires you to prove you're you, hence the need for your password. This recently saved a friend's iPad (it was found with the Activation Lock on).



            Doing this "at the Apple Store" gives you a better shot of getting help if you get stuck.






            share|improve this answer















            TLDR: Here's why this matters.



            Sharing the password is out of the question. But first let's fully discuss the problem scope.



            An iPad needs an Apple Account. I gather you figured out you can't go far with an iPad without one. Doing so also activates features like "Find My iPad" and iCloud storage and backup, which is free, so why not? App and media purchases are bound to the account not the device, so you can take your apps/media with you when you change devices.



            Each human needs their own Apple Account. So when she buy media or "buys" free apps, they're on her account. I gather she hasn't done much of that because there are password challenges for pay items, but still.



            But don't accidentally create two Apple accounts. Everyone I know has two, because of confusion when setting up a new device. Apple won't allow merging of accounts, and you don't want some purchases on one account and some on another. So she should try in advance to log into icloud.com with a web browser, with past emails. If she definitely doesn't have an Apple account, she should set one up in advance.



            Back up her data



            Creating her own Apple account and having her iPad on that is a good thing. But she should be clear all her apps will disappear (she can just re-"buy" them), and created content may disappear.



            Also, look in Settings/Mail, Contacts, Calendars to see where notes, contacts, and some data actually lives; if it says 'iCloud' she'll lose it, but she can set up a Gmail account and the Apple Store can help her move it there. That will need to be done before she disconnects from your Apple ID.



            enter image description here



            Uh-oh.



            Do the switch



            Then you need to get together with her and sign it out of your account and bind it to her [new?] account. It may seem weird that you need to "sign in to sign out", but that's an anti-theft feature. Part of resetting is unhooking "Find My iPad" from your account, something a thief would be very keen on doing obviously. So Apple requires you to prove you're you, hence the need for your password. This recently saved a friend's iPad (it was found with the Activation Lock on).



            Doing this "at the Apple Store" gives you a better shot of getting help if you get stuck.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 8 hours ago

























            answered yesterday









            HarperHarper

            922310




            922310












            • I can't vote down on this but I would, it is full of oppinion and story telling unrelated to the question at hand. Also, you are wrong about Apple encouraging you to create a new account. If you go to the Apple Store, they will pretty much force you to use your existing id and have now tied every thing from logging into you computer to watching Netflix require you to use your Apple ID. If they really wanted you to create an new id to make you buy stuff twice, it would pretty make everything they show a keynote not work.

              – Joe Tyman
              9 hours ago






            • 1





              @Joe Welcome to StackExchange. This is a Q&A platform where answerers are invited to improve their answers; that is the purpose of comments and in fact, that's what you just did. And I hear what you say and I improved the answer. That's how the rest of StackExchange works; it's nowhere near as salty as SO. I hope you see that a constructive comment goes much farther toward getting what you want. Assuming, of course, you want to persuade. I for one basically never downvote unless an answer is dangerous.

              – Harper
              8 hours ago


















            • I can't vote down on this but I would, it is full of oppinion and story telling unrelated to the question at hand. Also, you are wrong about Apple encouraging you to create a new account. If you go to the Apple Store, they will pretty much force you to use your existing id and have now tied every thing from logging into you computer to watching Netflix require you to use your Apple ID. If they really wanted you to create an new id to make you buy stuff twice, it would pretty make everything they show a keynote not work.

              – Joe Tyman
              9 hours ago






            • 1





              @Joe Welcome to StackExchange. This is a Q&A platform where answerers are invited to improve their answers; that is the purpose of comments and in fact, that's what you just did. And I hear what you say and I improved the answer. That's how the rest of StackExchange works; it's nowhere near as salty as SO. I hope you see that a constructive comment goes much farther toward getting what you want. Assuming, of course, you want to persuade. I for one basically never downvote unless an answer is dangerous.

              – Harper
              8 hours ago

















            I can't vote down on this but I would, it is full of oppinion and story telling unrelated to the question at hand. Also, you are wrong about Apple encouraging you to create a new account. If you go to the Apple Store, they will pretty much force you to use your existing id and have now tied every thing from logging into you computer to watching Netflix require you to use your Apple ID. If they really wanted you to create an new id to make you buy stuff twice, it would pretty make everything they show a keynote not work.

            – Joe Tyman
            9 hours ago





            I can't vote down on this but I would, it is full of oppinion and story telling unrelated to the question at hand. Also, you are wrong about Apple encouraging you to create a new account. If you go to the Apple Store, they will pretty much force you to use your existing id and have now tied every thing from logging into you computer to watching Netflix require you to use your Apple ID. If they really wanted you to create an new id to make you buy stuff twice, it would pretty make everything they show a keynote not work.

            – Joe Tyman
            9 hours ago




            1




            1





            @Joe Welcome to StackExchange. This is a Q&A platform where answerers are invited to improve their answers; that is the purpose of comments and in fact, that's what you just did. And I hear what you say and I improved the answer. That's how the rest of StackExchange works; it's nowhere near as salty as SO. I hope you see that a constructive comment goes much farther toward getting what you want. Assuming, of course, you want to persuade. I for one basically never downvote unless an answer is dangerous.

            – Harper
            8 hours ago






            @Joe Welcome to StackExchange. This is a Q&A platform where answerers are invited to improve their answers; that is the purpose of comments and in fact, that's what you just did. And I hear what you say and I improved the answer. That's how the rest of StackExchange works; it's nowhere near as salty as SO. I hope you see that a constructive comment goes much farther toward getting what you want. Assuming, of course, you want to persuade. I for one basically never downvote unless an answer is dangerous.

            – Harper
            8 hours ago












            5














            This is kinda speculative, but can you kick her ipad off your account through your apple ID?



            I know when I go into my phone, there's an entry for my computer there (apple account, my devices) and an option to remove the computer from my account. It doesn't require proximity or other access to the computer. And Nimeesh Neema mentions going into your account to check if her ipad's been removed [after getting it off].



            So you might be able to log into your account, check your devices, and find an option to remove this device from your account. I don't know what exactly it'll do to the ipad or what needs to be done to get in functional again, but if it somehow doesn't reset neatly she can take it to an apple store and figure it out. I suppose it's then her business to set up her own apple ID to get it working again.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Megha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.




















            • I think you're right, you can do that, but it would be a rougher transition for her because of the inability to back up her data and do a smooth transition.

              – Harper
              3 hours ago















            5














            This is kinda speculative, but can you kick her ipad off your account through your apple ID?



            I know when I go into my phone, there's an entry for my computer there (apple account, my devices) and an option to remove the computer from my account. It doesn't require proximity or other access to the computer. And Nimeesh Neema mentions going into your account to check if her ipad's been removed [after getting it off].



            So you might be able to log into your account, check your devices, and find an option to remove this device from your account. I don't know what exactly it'll do to the ipad or what needs to be done to get in functional again, but if it somehow doesn't reset neatly she can take it to an apple store and figure it out. I suppose it's then her business to set up her own apple ID to get it working again.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Megha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.




















            • I think you're right, you can do that, but it would be a rougher transition for her because of the inability to back up her data and do a smooth transition.

              – Harper
              3 hours ago













            5












            5








            5







            This is kinda speculative, but can you kick her ipad off your account through your apple ID?



            I know when I go into my phone, there's an entry for my computer there (apple account, my devices) and an option to remove the computer from my account. It doesn't require proximity or other access to the computer. And Nimeesh Neema mentions going into your account to check if her ipad's been removed [after getting it off].



            So you might be able to log into your account, check your devices, and find an option to remove this device from your account. I don't know what exactly it'll do to the ipad or what needs to be done to get in functional again, but if it somehow doesn't reset neatly she can take it to an apple store and figure it out. I suppose it's then her business to set up her own apple ID to get it working again.






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            This is kinda speculative, but can you kick her ipad off your account through your apple ID?



            I know when I go into my phone, there's an entry for my computer there (apple account, my devices) and an option to remove the computer from my account. It doesn't require proximity or other access to the computer. And Nimeesh Neema mentions going into your account to check if her ipad's been removed [after getting it off].



            So you might be able to log into your account, check your devices, and find an option to remove this device from your account. I don't know what exactly it'll do to the ipad or what needs to be done to get in functional again, but if it somehow doesn't reset neatly she can take it to an apple store and figure it out. I suppose it's then her business to set up her own apple ID to get it working again.







            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Megha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer






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            answered yesterday









            MeghaMegha

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            511




            New contributor




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            New contributor





            Megha is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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            • I think you're right, you can do that, but it would be a rougher transition for her because of the inability to back up her data and do a smooth transition.

              – Harper
              3 hours ago

















            • I think you're right, you can do that, but it would be a rougher transition for her because of the inability to back up her data and do a smooth transition.

              – Harper
              3 hours ago
















            I think you're right, you can do that, but it would be a rougher transition for her because of the inability to back up her data and do a smooth transition.

            – Harper
            3 hours ago





            I think you're right, you can do that, but it would be a rougher transition for her because of the inability to back up her data and do a smooth transition.

            – Harper
            3 hours ago





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