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The one simple trick helps keep out cyber creeps on an iPhone

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The one simple trick helps keep out cyber creeps on an iPhone

We’ve all experienced that frustrating moment when we’re staring at a login screen, desperately trying to recall a complex password with multiple cases, numbers and symbols.

Forgetting passwords is not only maddening, it can also pose security risks if we resort to easily guessable ones. Thankfully, Apple has a brilliant solution built right into your iPhone that can save you from this predicament — the password autofill feature.

This incredibly smart tool acts as your own personal, secure password manager, storing and automatically filling in your login credentials whenever needed. The best part? Setting it up is a breeze, and using it is even easier. With just one simple trick, you’ll never have to worry about forgetting passwords on your iPhone again.

The trick is to take advantage of your iPhone’s ability to securely store and autofill passwords across websites and apps, making logging in a breeze. This handy feature remembers your complex credentials and fills them in for you, saving you the hassle of recalling or looking them up. 

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And don’t worry, it’s incredibly secure. Your iPhone authenticates with Face ID or Touch ID before autofilling your saved passwords, ensuring that only you can access this sensitive information.

The autofill feature on iPhone  (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

How to activate autofill on your iPhone

Autofill is a convenient feature that saves you time and hassle. To activate autofill on your iPhone, follow these steps:

  • Open the Settings app on your iPhone.
  • Scroll down and tap on ‘Safari’ to open Safari settings.
  • Within Safari settings, tap on ‘Autofill.’
  • Ensure the ‘Use Contact Info’ toggle is turned on to allow Safari to fill in contact information from your contacts.

Steps to activate autofill on your iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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How to set up password options

  • Return to the main Settings menu
  • Tap Passwords
  • Your iPhone will use Face ID or Touch ID to authenticate
  • Click Password Options

Steps to set up password options (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

  • Next to AutoFill Passwords and Passkeys, toggle it on
  • Now, choose the information you want to be included in AutoFill. This can include passwords saved in your iCloud Keychain, Authenticator, Chrome, Edge, Google, and credit card information.

Steps to set up password options  (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

MORE: TRY OUT THESE 10 SIRI HIDDEN HACKS ON YOUR IPHONE TODAY  

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How to access your saved passwords

To have websites or apps remember your passwords on an iPhone, you can use the built-in password manager. Here are the steps:

  • Go to the Settings app on your iPhone
  • Scroll down and tap on Passwords
  • You may be prompted to use Face ID, Touch ID, or enter your passcode
  • To see a list of saved passwords, simply scroll down and select a website or app from the list
  • Then click on Password, and the password will be displayed
  • You can also ask Siri to show your passwords by saying, “Show my passwords,” or ask for a specific one, like, “What is my Hulu password?”

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Steps to access your saved passwords  (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

  • To add a new password, tap the plus (+) icon in the top right corner
  • Tap New Password 
  • Then, enter the website and login details.
  • You can click where it says Password, and it will offer a Strong Password Suggestion. Click on it to accept the suggestion

Remember, it’s important to use strong, unique passwords for each site and enable two-factor authentication where possible for added security. Also, consider using a password manager to generate and store complex passwords.

MORE: ASK KURT: HOW TO AVOID PHISHING SCAMS AND PROTECT YOUR IPHONE

How to autofill passwords on your iPhone

Next, here’s how to get websites to remember your passwords.

  • On the sign-in screen for the website or app, tap the account name field
  • Tap the account suggested at the bottom of the screen or near the top of the keyboard.
  • Now, tap the key icon to autofill your password
  • Then tap an account. 

Steps to autofill passwords on your iPhone  (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

  • The password is filled in, so to see the password, tap the eye icon.  
  • Now, your password is securely autofilled without the website storing it.

Steps to autofill passwords on your iPhone  (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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Security and privacy

While autofill is incredibly convenient, it’s also secure. Your iPhone uses Face ID or Touch ID to authenticate before filling in your saved information, ensuring that only you can access your personal data.

MORE: HOW TO UNLOCK SPECIAL FEATURES ON YOUR IPHONE TO IMPROVE VOICE SEARCH  

Kurt’s key takeaways

With autofill activated, you can breeze through online forms and checkouts without having to remember every detail. It’s just one of the many ways your iPhone is designed to make everyday tasks a little easier.

In an age where digital convenience often comes at the cost of privacy, how do you balance the benefits of features like iPhone’s autofill with the need for personal security?  Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact

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Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition and other Nintendo games are up to 50 percent off

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Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition and other Nintendo games are up to 50 percent off

Unlike the day after Thanksgiving, when people are rushing online and to the stores to look for deals, the day after Christmas is usually a time to recover from the festivities and check your budget to see how much all that gifting has cost you. However, if you’re in a shopping mood, or if you suddenly realized you forgot somebody important, there are still some deals out there.

For example, Nintendo is offering a bunch of its best-known games at deals ranging from 25 to 50 percent off. These include Princess Peach: Showtime ($41.99 down from $59.99), The Legend of Zelda, Echoes of Wisdom (also ($41.99 down from $59.99), Super Mario Odyssey ($39.99 down from $59.99), Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition ($39.99 down from $69.99) — and a slew of others. 

Princess Peach: Showtime!

Princess Peach: Showtime! is the first Nintendo game to star the Mushroom Kingdom royal in nearly 20 years, and it’s a welcome return to form. Peach finds herself having to fight, puzzle, and platform her way through different sets in a community theater. She inhabits a different role — with different abilities — in each stage, which keeps the game engaging. Read our review.
Princess Peach Showtime! box art on a plain white background.

Where to Buy:

  • $59.99 $49.99 at Amazon
  • $59.99 $41.99 at Nintendo

So if you’ve received a new Switch 2 for the holidays — or you gifted yourself one — this is a great way to start assembling your game library for the new year.

Other great deals

Amazon is still offering major discounts on some of its smart speakers. For example, the Amazon Echo Spot, a nifty bedside smart speaker / clock, is on sale at Amazon for $44.99 down from $79.99, the lowest price it has sold for. If you want something with a screen, the Echo Show 5 is available at Amazon for $59.99, down from $89.99, and while it’s gone down as low as $39.99 in the past, this isn’t a bad price if you want one now. Read our reviews of the Echo Spot and the Echo Show 5.

Anker’s Prime Charger is a charging station which supports 250W output via four USB-C and two USB-A ports. It’s now at its lowest price of $99.99 (down from $169.99, a savings of $70) at Amazon and at Anker (using the code WS7DV2I5IMSW).

You can still get an Apple Airtag for $19 (down from $29) at Walmart — and after all, how can you have too many of these handy trackers (our choice as best tracker for iPhone users), especially if you’ve gotten any holiday gifts that you really don’t want to misplace? Read our original review.

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Fox News AI Newsletter: How we can live with AI without losing our humanity

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Fox News AI Newsletter: How we can live with AI without losing our humanity

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Welcome to Fox News’ Artificial Intelligence newsletter with the latest AI technology advancements.

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER:

– Here’s how we can live and work with artificial intelligence without losing our humanity
– Amazon adds controversial AI facial recognition to Ring
– New US military GenAI tool ‘critical first step’ in future of warfare, says expert

OPINION: The Vatican’s recent document on artificial intelligence, Antiqua et Nova — “The Old and the New” — is not a technical treatise, but a philosophical reminder: The advance of AI provokes in new ways fundamental questions about the nature of intelligence and the kind of people we must become to wield powerful tools responsibly.

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The Vatican’s document on artificial intelligence and comments from Pope Leo XIV frame AI as a powerful human achievement while warning that easy access to information can undermine genuine understanding, especially among the young. (iStock)

‘FAMILIAR FACES’: Amazon’s Ring video doorbells are getting a major artificial intelligence (AI) upgrade, and it is already stirring controversy. The company has started rolling out a new feature called Familiar Faces to Ring owners across the United States. Once enabled, the feature uses AI-powered facial recognition to identify people who regularly appear at your door. Instead of a generic alert saying a person is at your door, you might see something far more personal, like “Mom at Front Door.” On the surface, that sounds convenient.

‘FORGE AHEAD’: The recently launched “GenAI” tool for U.S. service members and Department of War workers is a “critical first step” in the future of warfare, according to a military expert. This month, the Pentagon announced the launch of GenAI.mil, a military-focused AI platform powered by Google Gemini. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said the platform is designed to give U.S. military personnel direct access to AI tools to help “revolutioniz[e] the way we win.”

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth addressed reporters during a Pentagon news conference in Arlington, Virginia, on June 26, 2025. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

POWER SHIFT: China is racing ahead of the U.S. in artificial intelligence (AI), bypassing regulatory roadblocks that O’Leary Ventures Chairman Kevin O’Leary warns are leaving America dangerously behind.

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THE NEXT FRONTIER: Google executive Royal Hansen responded to some lawmakers’ calls to slow the development of artificial intelligence (AI) in the U.S., emphasizing the need to develop and use the technology responsibly rather than fall behind other countries.

FEED FREEDOM NOW: Instagram is rolling out a new tool called Your Algorithm that gives you direct control over the videos that fill your Reels tab. Your interests shift as time moves on. Now your feed can shift with you in real time.

‘AHEAD OF THE GAME’: FBI Director Kash Patel said Saturday the agency is ramping up its use of artificial intelligence (AI) tools to counter domestic and international threats. In a post on X, Patel said the FBI has been advancing its technology, calling AI a “key component” of its strategy to respond to threats and stay “ahead of the game.”

FBI Director Kash Patel speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

WHO’S IN CHARGE?: A week after Time Magazine named the “Architects of AI” as Person of the Year, the latest Fox News national survey of registered voters finds broad support for careful development of artificial intelligence — yet little agreement on who should regulate it. The poll, released Thursday, finds 8 in 10 voters favor a careful approach to developing AI to manage potential risks to the U.S., while 2 in 10 prefer rapid advancement to stay ahead of countries like China.

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Stay up to date on the latest AI technology advancements and learn about the challenges and opportunities AI presents now and for the future with Fox News here.

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Hollywood cozied up to AI in 2025 and had nothing good to show for it

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Hollywood cozied up to AI in 2025 and had nothing good to show for it

AI isn’t new to Hollywood — but this was the year when it really made its presence felt. For years now, the entertainment industry has used different kinds of generative AI products for a variety of post-production processes ranging from de-aging actors to removing green screen backgrounds. In many instances, the technology has been a useful tool for human artists tasked with tedious and painstaking labor that might have otherwise taken them inordinate amounts of time to complete. But in 2025, Hollywood really began warming to the idea of deploying the kind of gen AI that’s really only good for conjuring up text-to-video slop that doesn’t have all that many practical uses in traditional production workflows. Despite all of the money and effort being put into it, there’s yet to be a gen-AI project that has shown why it’s worth all of the hype.

This confluence of Hollywood and AI didn’t start out so rosy. Studios were in a prime position to take the companies behind this technology to court because their video generation models had clearly been trained on copyrighted intellectual property. A number of major production companies including Disney, Universal, and Warner Bros. Discovery did file lawsuits against AI firms and their boosters for that very reason. But rather than pummeling AI purveyors into the ground, some of Hollywood’s biggest power players chose instead to get into bed with them. We have only just begun to see what can come from this new era of gen-AI partnerships, but all signs point to things getting much sloppier in the very near future.

Though many of this year’s gen-AI headlines were dominated by larger outfits like Google and OpenAI, we also saw a number of smaller players vying for a seat at the entertainment table. There was Asteria, Natasha Lyonne’s startup focused on developing film projects with “ethically” engineered video generation models, and startups like Showrunner, an Amazon-backed platform designed to let subscribers create animated “shows” (a very generous term) from just a few descriptive sentences plugged into Discord. These relatively new companies were all desperate to legitimize the idea that their flavor of gen AI could be used to supercharge film / TV development while bringing down overall production costs.

Asteria didn’t have anything more than hype to share with the public after announcing its first film, and it was hard to believe that normal people would be interested in paying for Showrunner’s shoddily cobbled-together knockoffs of shows made by actual animators. In the latter case, it felt very much like Showrunner’s real goal was to secure juicy partnerships with established studios like Disney that would lead to their tech being baked into platforms where users could prompt up bespoke content featuring recognizable characters from massive franchises.

That idea seemed fairly ridiculous when Showrunner first hit the scene because its models churn out the modern equivalent of clunky JibJab cartoons. But in due time, Disney made it clear that — crappy as text-to-video generators tend to be for anything beyond quick memes — it was interested in experimenting with that kind of content. In December, Disney entered into a three-year, billion-dollar licensing deal with OpenAI that would let Sora users make AI videos with 200 different characters from Star Wars, Marvel, and more.

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Netflix became one of the first big studios to proudly announce that it was going all-in on gen AI. After using the technology to produce special effects for one of its original series, the streamer published a list of general guidelines it wanted its partners to follow if they planned to jump on the slop bandwagon as well. Though Netflix wasn’t mandating that filmmakers use gen AI, it made clear that saving money on VFX work was one of the main reasons it was coming out in support of the trend. And it wasn’t long before Amazon followed suit by releasing multiple Japanese anime series that were terribly localized into other languages because the dubbing process didn’t involve any human translators or voice actors.

Amazon’s gen-AI dubs became a shining example of how poorly this technology can perform. They also highlighted how some studios aren’t putting all that much effort into making sure that their gen AI-derived projects are polished enough to be released to the public. That was also true of Amazon’s machine-generated TV recaps, which frequently got details about different shows very wrong. Both of these fiascos made it seem as if Amazon somehow thought that people wouldn’t notice or care about AI’s inability to consistently generate high-quality outputs. The studio quickly pulled its AI-dubbed series and the recap feature down, but it didn’t say that it wouldn’t try this kind of nonsense again.

Disney-provided examples of its characters in Sora AI content.
Image: Disney

All of this and other dumb stunts like AI “actress” Tilly Norwood made it feel like certain segments of the entertainment industry were becoming more comfortable trying to foist gen-AI “entertainment” on people even though it left many people deeply unimpressed and put off. None of these projects demonstrated to the public why anyone except for money-pinching execs (and people who worship them for some reason) would be excited by a future shaped by this technology.

Aside from a few unimpressive images, we still haven’t seen what all might come from some of these collaborations, like Disney cozying up to OpenAI. But next year AI’s presence in Hollywood will be even more pronounced. Disney plans to dedicate an entire section of its streaming service to user-generated content sourced from Sora, and it will encourage Disney employees to use OpenAI’s ChatGPT products. But the deal’s real significance in this current moment is the message it sends to other studios about how they should move as Hollywood enters its slop era.

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Regardless of whether Disney thinks this will work out well, the studio has signaled that it doesn’t want to be left behind if AI adoption keeps accelerating. That tells other production houses that they should follow suit, and if that becomes the case, there’s no telling how much more of this stuff we are all going to be forced to endure.

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