Inability of the owner of an iPhone or his legal representative to find the passcode or to provide information to support that they require to assist in opening the iPhone
An iPhone has a programmed security feature that disables the ability to open an iPhone for progressively longer periods after successive failed attempts. As I understand it, after 10 failed attempts, an iPhone will not open thereafter even if the correct passcode is entered on the next attempt or on any subsequent attempts. The site information says after that, one must call Apple Support. My first question is this: what information must the caller then provide to Apple Support that will result in Support informing the caller what they can then do that will result in the successful opening of the iPhone? And what if for any reason the caller is not able to provide one or more pieces of information that Support requests? The serious fault that I find with this feature is sometimes a person suffers a catastrophic brain trauma from an accident, or moderate to severe memory loss from dementia. If neither the owner nor is or her representative can ever open the iPhone again because they have become incapable of remembering their passcode and any item of information that Support may require, that iPhone has become no more useful than a paperweight of equal weight. An iPhone is far too expensive for an owner or their legal representative to be permanently deprived of the right to use this expensive piece of equipment that is the property of its owner.
iPhone 11, iOS 16