Well... I went through the iforgot.apple.com flow. If the past is any indication, I'll likely have to wait 30 or 90 days to get a response. This just seems... sub-optimal. It's a very strange set of hoops to have candidates jump through.
And sad, too. I think my cover letter was one of the best I've ever written. Now no one will be able to appreciate it but me.
This is not how things were in the old days. Back then we would just show up at a job site and after working for a few weeks go to HR and say "hey. I didn't get a check." And then when HR couldn't find your records, they just assumed they were lost somewhere and helpfully set you up as an employee with information you gave them.
How you have changed, outlaw sili valley.
[Edit]
So when I say I have zero iProducts, that's not entirely true. I do have an old 2015 era iMac. But the first thing I did with it was put a new hard drive in it and boot up FreeBSD. And then I installed Linux and installed FreeBSD as a VM under Linux because I have nothing better to do with my time. And somewhere along the way L4 got wedged in there, because you're not a TRUE power user unless you have L4 running under bhyve under FreeBSD under KVM under linux on hardware the manufacturer would really prefer you just run Mach on. I am wild. I am the wind.
So I found the old macOS hard drive and installed it. It really did not want to boot. It told me so many horrible things when I tried to boot, mostly that I really should visit an apple support web site. The AppleID I'm trying to recover is the same one I used to create a macOS account with. I wonder if apple knows I've installed Linux, FreeBSD and L4/Linux on their hardware and have marked my AppleId as "unholy spawn of Satan" ? I guess if the roles were reversed I might think anyone who installed L4 on Apple Hardware is "not to be trusted."
Or more seriously... I wonder if you don't boot macOS or log into macOS with your AppleId every now and again, you go on the "naughty" or "potentially naughty" list. This whole affair really makes me miss my Atari 520ST.
[/Edit]
Maybe I could sign in with someone else's AppleId, then submit the resume. It has my email and phone number on it, so hopefully they would send correspondence to that email address and not the one associated w/ the AppleId.
Maybe this is a test. Maybe everyone who tries to login to jobs.apple.com is told "oh yeah... that AppleId is invalid," and then they wait and see what people do. If they give up, then they're not Apple material. If they cheat and use someone else's AppleId, then they're morals are found lacking. If they post about their experience on a public forum, then they're a security risk.
I tried with a new email address and throw-away public one time use SMS numbers from textrapp.com, esimplus.me, receive-sms.io and 7sim.net. I think Apple knows those are fake numbers.
almost all of those are blacklisted from banks and email providers, yes.
btw there’s no restriction on creating new Apple accounts under a phone number that’s already associated with one. I’ve lost access to several Apple IDs over the last 20 years w the same phone number.
what there is a restriction on: after creating something like 4 or 5 Apple IDs from the same phone or computer. Apple goes that’s it , this device isn’t allowed to create any more IDs.
you could do that, but you’ll want to serialize a hackintosh for it to register w. iMessage or iCloud
You can disregard the instructions for generating one [0] and just use the serial of your “Mac that hasn’t been booted since 2015.” I’ve been using one of of a long-dead long-gone G5 and prefer to use a real one from a computer I actually own (or owned).
Or use OpenCore Patcher to boot off of a usb stick and install a more recent version of macOS on your real mac. In this case. iMessage and iCloud should just work because it’ll pick up your genuine serial number.
The likely issue you’re having on an older Mac and an older macOS is that it has an Apple root certificate that’s now expired and unable to register with either of those things. You’re SOL on anything prior to 10.10 Yosemite…. The apple root certs in 10.10 through 10.15 expired in 2019 and the installers for 10.10 through 10.15 were re-distributed by Apple with root certs expiring in 2029 [1] -
(internet recovery should download and reinstall the new updated version with updated root certs if yours shipped with at least 10.10 Yosemite. You have to use the hotkey for internet recovery - not the recovery partition on your HDD)
However….. OpenCore patcher will even let you install Tahoe, which doesn’t have this problem and will even get updates for another …(?) it’s the last Intel version , so whenever Apple says to hell with Intel I guess.
I can't find a place where I'm asked for the iMac's serial number. But I probably should have written it down the last time I booted (see the update about me finally being able to boot an old iMac.)
I'm going to laugh my a* off if they try to tell me the serial number they have associated with my AppleId is the 20 year old G5 iMac they admitted died due to a design flaw and they were responsible for replacing but then refused to replace because I bought it from a reseller that had since gone out of business.
But thx for the references. I probably need to spend a little more time digging through them.
Also. You have a WORKING iMac G5? Mine died a couple months after delivery. Apple then refused to replace, repair or refund, even after admitting they were responsible for it under their warranty.
This was about the same time I started de-applifying my life.
The irony is at the time I was performing a security review of the code that went into the QualComm baseband processor apple used for the original iPhone.
How do you call / chat w/ AppleID support without logging in first?
Or rather... thank you for the suggestion. I'm going to dig into the docs on their web page and see if there's a way to contact support w/o having to log in first.
[edit: After a bit of digging around, as best I can tell, I have to log in with an AppleId before I can post a question in the support forums about how to reset my AppleId.]
Let me also say I am truly grateful for the time you took to respond to this message. If I sound gruff, it's because the situation is so bizarre and a little frustrating. Please don't take this to mean I'm unappreciative.
Sure, but I was asking about a phone number where I can call and talk to a human who may have more experience in these matters.
The first thing support.apple.com asks me to do (when I want to post a question) is to ask me to log in with my AppleId. My problem is that the AppleId that has always worked in the past no longer seems to work and when I try to create a new one, it says my mobile phone number is invalid.
Update... After a bit of work, I was able to boot the old hard drive with macOS and tried to log into apple services. Of course it rejected my existing AppleId password, but this time with a working iMac, I asked it to send a reset code to my iMac.
It seemed to think it sent one to my iMac, but nothing ever showed up. The internet says it should have showed up on my iMac's screen or in the upper right corner of the screen. No dice.
This is similar to what happened at the Apple Store when we tried the "use someone else's iProduct" to reset the password. The login page seemed to think it had sent a PIN, but it never showed up at the end device.
I suspect that because I'm in the iForgot 24 hour cool down period, nothing is going to work. They claim they will send instructions to my phone (I hope they realize my phone doesn't have iMessage) in 15 hours for what to do while waiting 30 or 90 days to try the reset again.
This sort of reminds me when we got bought out and we had problems with our dev certificate. We had released a couple versions of "iFoo" using our domain "foo.com". Then we got bought out by bar.com and wanted to release future versions of iFoo under bar.com branding. When we eventually got ahold of a human, they said we would have to re-release iFoo as iBar and re-submit it as a new app. We eventually did this, but they responded that iBar was confusingly similar to an existing app called iFoo and they wouldn't allow it to be released in the app store. Then they revoked the foo.com dev cert because of shinanigans. When we tried to explain to them that we were following the instructions they had given us (and sending them emails and screenshots where they told us what to do,) they closed the support ticket and revoked bar.com's dev cert as well.
I think Apple processes work very well for the usual case, but they don't think through some of the corner cases.
The irony is the role I was attempting to apply for was one that would (partially) oversee working out these corner cases and what Apple should be doing in those situations. I was invited to apply for this position explicitly because I had encountered similar problems in the past.
My suspicion is I'll have a 30 day wait at the end of the initial iForgot 24 hour cool down. If I'm still looking for a job in 30 days, I'll probably still submit my resume. It seems that Apple really needs some help in this area.
But I applied for a job in '93 and didn't get it and I've been told you're only allowed to apply to Apple once (despite having worked on the Qualcomm baseband processor in the original iPhone and as a contractor in the very early days of macontosh.) And I'm sure they wouldn't be happy about me talking publicly about identity management corner cases. I suspect the chance they would really care to hire me is fairly low.
But if anyone from Apple ever reads this, feel free to contact me if you need more details on what inputs I provided to your system and what the responses were.
Another Update... at the end of the iforgot process, Apple is supposed to send you an update within 24 hours as to what the disposition of your password reset request will be. In the past, if you opt not to receive a PIN via a registered iProduct, I've seen them say "we're going to wait 30 days and then allow you to reset your password." I imagine this is to discourage "bad actors" from launching massive efforts of password resetting. If a bad guy was able to convince Apple that they were the TRUE owner of an account, maybe that would give them an advantage in stealing services or user data. So sure, introducing a waiting time is not the worst idea in the world.
About 15 hours ago, I went through the process again and the response was (and I paraphrase) "tsk. tsk. do not annoy us with your password reset attempts. we're going to tell you more about how to recover in 15 hours." Again... annoying, but not horrible. If we're trying to make things difficult for bad actors, this isn't that big of an annoyance.
But at the end of the 24 hour waiting period, I still hadn't received an email from Apple at either of the email accounts I had used while trying to reset my AppleId. (The first is the one the AppleId was explicitly tied to and the second was an alt I use mostly for newsletters and subscribing to web site updates I'm halfway interested in. I used that because I couldn't remember if I had ever told Apple about that address.) And that seemed frustrating. You told me you were going to send me info about resetting my password, but you've welched on the deal.
And then I had a disturbing thought... Several years ago I created an AppleId with my work phone and a completely different throw-away gmail address. After digging up the password for that account, I logged in and sure enough... there's the email from Apple.
The only thing I can think is Apple tied my IP Address or location to all three email addresses involved and somehow conflated them together. I send a reset request from me@not-a-gmail-domain.com and get a response on havent_used_this_address_in_a_year@gmail.com. That is very, very weird.
But the good news is Apple says I only have to wait 7 days to reset the password on this account.
I've been thinking about getting back into writing code for the PinePhone I bought a few years ago. Maybe I will get a pre-paid t-mob or mint sim and try to create a new AppleId at a coffee shop on the far side of town.
I can't say this has filled me with a great deal of optimism. Obviously this isn't happening very often and I'm a corner case. Otherwise we would surely have heard from thousands of people saying "I can't log into my Apple account!" I'm also sure that when the Apple people were thinking through the process flows, they didn't assume I might try to reset my password while in the 24 hour iForgot wait state.
I had been a registered Apple Developer since the late 80s, though the email address in question was only attached to my dev account since around 2006. AppleIds as we know them have gone through changes... 2FA... removing questions... adding the ability to reset from an iProduct. My guess is my id was generated shortly after AppleIds became a thing. Then I stopped using it for a while and they changed the schema of the database holding AppleID details and maybe I didn't log in during some critical time frame. Then I tried to log in and got marked as a bad guy trying to attack the security of Apple's user credential integrity. I'm not... but of course, if I was I wouldn't admit it.
In any event, I'm sure my original AppleId is hopelessly horked. And that id was tied to the mobile number I've had since 1998. I suspect if I try to use that number again, apple will take a look at my IP geolocation, match it to previous attempts to recover the password and assume I'm again a bad guy trying to do bad things. If this hypothesis is correct, maybe my neighbors will have problems registering iProducts.
Apple can, of course, do whatever the heck it wants. I suspect they don't care enough to modify their processes because the number of people wedged in this state are vanishingly small. Millions (billions?) of AppleIds have been registered. Who cares if some dude from Seattle can't ever access Apple services with email or phone identifiers they want to use.
I suspect the answer to this is going to be:
a) spin up an entirely new email address. I don't think apple will have a problem with me using gmail as I'm sure they have millions of customers that already use it.
b) get a new phone number. Like I said, I was thinking about doing some coding on my PinePhonePro, so that's not a completely bad idea.
c) go across town to a coffee shop (or maybe the Apple store, do they have free wifi there?) and register a new AppleId.
d) NEVER FORGET THE PASSWORD I USED.
e) NEVER USE THAT AppleId AT MY HOME.
This is probably overkill, but Apple has successfully hidden the details of their user credential processes and I have to imply state and state transitions from their public behaviour. I really don't want to spent too much more time on this. (Now that I think about it... the problems we had with our dev certificate a few years back absolutely had the same "actual state is hidden behind an opaque wall of process" characteristic.)
All these problems are, I'm sure, Apple's way of limiting the effectiveness of social engineering attacks. And that's something I can respect. But if you're the by-catch of Apple's dragnet, it's absolutely annoying.
apple auth is a clusterfuck
Well... I went through the iforgot.apple.com flow. If the past is any indication, I'll likely have to wait 30 or 90 days to get a response. This just seems... sub-optimal. It's a very strange set of hoops to have candidates jump through.
And sad, too. I think my cover letter was one of the best I've ever written. Now no one will be able to appreciate it but me.
This is not how things were in the old days. Back then we would just show up at a job site and after working for a few weeks go to HR and say "hey. I didn't get a check." And then when HR couldn't find your records, they just assumed they were lost somewhere and helpfully set you up as an employee with information you gave them.
How you have changed, outlaw sili valley.
[Edit] So when I say I have zero iProducts, that's not entirely true. I do have an old 2015 era iMac. But the first thing I did with it was put a new hard drive in it and boot up FreeBSD. And then I installed Linux and installed FreeBSD as a VM under Linux because I have nothing better to do with my time. And somewhere along the way L4 got wedged in there, because you're not a TRUE power user unless you have L4 running under bhyve under FreeBSD under KVM under linux on hardware the manufacturer would really prefer you just run Mach on. I am wild. I am the wind.
So I found the old macOS hard drive and installed it. It really did not want to boot. It told me so many horrible things when I tried to boot, mostly that I really should visit an apple support web site. The AppleID I'm trying to recover is the same one I used to create a macOS account with. I wonder if apple knows I've installed Linux, FreeBSD and L4/Linux on their hardware and have marked my AppleId as "unholy spawn of Satan" ? I guess if the roles were reversed I might think anyone who installed L4 on Apple Hardware is "not to be trusted."
Or more seriously... I wonder if you don't boot macOS or log into macOS with your AppleId every now and again, you go on the "naughty" or "potentially naughty" list. This whole affair really makes me miss my Atari 520ST. [/Edit]
Maybe I could sign in with someone else's AppleId, then submit the resume. It has my email and phone number on it, so hopefully they would send correspondence to that email address and not the one associated w/ the AppleId.
Maybe this is a test. Maybe everyone who tries to login to jobs.apple.com is told "oh yeah... that AppleId is invalid," and then they wait and see what people do. If they give up, then they're not Apple material. If they cheat and use someone else's AppleId, then they're morals are found lacking. If they post about their experience on a public forum, then they're a security risk.
Call Apple, in Canada the support number is 1-800-263-3394. In the US it’s 1-800-275-2273
Thank you. I'll give them a call Monday morning.
You're welcome!
I tried with a new email address and throw-away public one time use SMS numbers from textrapp.com, esimplus.me, receive-sms.io and 7sim.net. I think Apple knows those are fake numbers.
almost all of those are blacklisted from banks and email providers, yes.
btw there’s no restriction on creating new Apple accounts under a phone number that’s already associated with one. I’ve lost access to several Apple IDs over the last 20 years w the same phone number.
what there is a restriction on: after creating something like 4 or 5 Apple IDs from the same phone or computer. Apple goes that’s it , this device isn’t allowed to create any more IDs.
Sure, but I get an error when I try to use my phone number. It's like a distinction without a difference.
Do you have dual eSIM capability on your phone?
Or a spare used/old phone with eSIM capability?
/r/usmobile has a $10/mo plan that can be up and provisioned (usually in just a few minutes) as a second line.
kicker: as long as you’re physically in the US . But you can create an Apple ID with prepaid intl SIMs too.
Yeah. I was just looking at cheap tello and mint mobile plans. I think I assumed t-mob plans were horrifically expensive. Thx for the info.
I'm in the states, so that simplifies things.
USMobile*
they sell AT&T as “dark star” Verizon as “warp” T-Mobile as “light speed “
You pick when activating.
I guess I could boot a Hackintosh in a VM and try to create an AppleId that way. But I think it will ask me for a phone number again.
you could do that, but you’ll want to serialize a hackintosh for it to register w. iMessage or iCloud
You can disregard the instructions for generating one [0] and just use the serial of your “Mac that hasn’t been booted since 2015.” I’ve been using one of of a long-dead long-gone G5 and prefer to use a real one from a computer I actually own (or owned).
Or use OpenCore Patcher to boot off of a usb stick and install a more recent version of macOS on your real mac. In this case. iMessage and iCloud should just work because it’ll pick up your genuine serial number.
[0] https://dortania.github.io/OpenCore-Post-Install/universal/i...
The likely issue you’re having on an older Mac and an older macOS is that it has an Apple root certificate that’s now expired and unable to register with either of those things. You’re SOL on anything prior to 10.10 Yosemite…. The apple root certs in 10.10 through 10.15 expired in 2019 and the installers for 10.10 through 10.15 were re-distributed by Apple with root certs expiring in 2029 [1] -
(internet recovery should download and reinstall the new updated version with updated root certs if yours shipped with at least 10.10 Yosemite. You have to use the hotkey for internet recovery - not the recovery partition on your HDD)
However….. OpenCore patcher will even let you install Tahoe, which doesn’t have this problem and will even get updates for another …(?) it’s the last Intel version , so whenever Apple says to hell with Intel I guess.
[1] https://tidbits.com/2019/10/28/redownload-archived-macos-ins...
I can't find a place where I'm asked for the iMac's serial number. But I probably should have written it down the last time I booted (see the update about me finally being able to boot an old iMac.)
I'm going to laugh my a* off if they try to tell me the serial number they have associated with my AppleId is the 20 year old G5 iMac they admitted died due to a design flaw and they were responsible for replacing but then refused to replace because I bought it from a reseller that had since gone out of business.
But thx for the references. I probably need to spend a little more time digging through them.
Also. You have a WORKING iMac G5? Mine died a couple months after delivery. Apple then refused to replace, repair or refund, even after admitting they were responsible for it under their warranty.
This was about the same time I started de-applifying my life.
The irony is at the time I was performing a security review of the code that went into the QualComm baseband processor apple used for the original iPhone.
Try and deregister your phone number from imessage (there is a place on apple.com to do this)
We tried that at the Apple Store. My phone number is not registered with iMessage.
Just for kicks, I tried doing it at home. The error messages I got were:
"Enter a valid Phone Number" (I had) "Service::Unavailable" ??? "That Code has been used. Hit Refresh Code." (the refresh code link is unresponsive)
and also, the error we got at the Apple Store:
"It looks like the phone number you provided is not registered with iMessage. Please verify the number and try again."
You can always call/chat with Apple ID support. They are likely better equipped to solve this than the t-shirt crew in your local store.
How do you call / chat w/ AppleID support without logging in first?
Or rather... thank you for the suggestion. I'm going to dig into the docs on their web page and see if there's a way to contact support w/o having to log in first.
[edit: After a bit of digging around, as best I can tell, I have to log in with an AppleId before I can post a question in the support forums about how to reset my AppleId.]
Let me also say I am truly grateful for the time you took to respond to this message. If I sound gruff, it's because the situation is so bizarre and a little frustrating. Please don't take this to mean I'm unappreciative.
Oh wait. You said "call." Does Apple have a support phone number?
support.apple.com
Sure, but I was asking about a phone number where I can call and talk to a human who may have more experience in these matters.
The first thing support.apple.com asks me to do (when I want to post a question) is to ask me to log in with my AppleId. My problem is that the AppleId that has always worked in the past no longer seems to work and when I try to create a new one, it says my mobile phone number is invalid.
Update... After a bit of work, I was able to boot the old hard drive with macOS and tried to log into apple services. Of course it rejected my existing AppleId password, but this time with a working iMac, I asked it to send a reset code to my iMac.
It seemed to think it sent one to my iMac, but nothing ever showed up. The internet says it should have showed up on my iMac's screen or in the upper right corner of the screen. No dice.
This is similar to what happened at the Apple Store when we tried the "use someone else's iProduct" to reset the password. The login page seemed to think it had sent a PIN, but it never showed up at the end device.
I suspect that because I'm in the iForgot 24 hour cool down period, nothing is going to work. They claim they will send instructions to my phone (I hope they realize my phone doesn't have iMessage) in 15 hours for what to do while waiting 30 or 90 days to try the reset again.
This sort of reminds me when we got bought out and we had problems with our dev certificate. We had released a couple versions of "iFoo" using our domain "foo.com". Then we got bought out by bar.com and wanted to release future versions of iFoo under bar.com branding. When we eventually got ahold of a human, they said we would have to re-release iFoo as iBar and re-submit it as a new app. We eventually did this, but they responded that iBar was confusingly similar to an existing app called iFoo and they wouldn't allow it to be released in the app store. Then they revoked the foo.com dev cert because of shinanigans. When we tried to explain to them that we were following the instructions they had given us (and sending them emails and screenshots where they told us what to do,) they closed the support ticket and revoked bar.com's dev cert as well.
I think Apple processes work very well for the usual case, but they don't think through some of the corner cases.
The irony is the role I was attempting to apply for was one that would (partially) oversee working out these corner cases and what Apple should be doing in those situations. I was invited to apply for this position explicitly because I had encountered similar problems in the past.
My suspicion is I'll have a 30 day wait at the end of the initial iForgot 24 hour cool down. If I'm still looking for a job in 30 days, I'll probably still submit my resume. It seems that Apple really needs some help in this area.
But I applied for a job in '93 and didn't get it and I've been told you're only allowed to apply to Apple once (despite having worked on the Qualcomm baseband processor in the original iPhone and as a contractor in the very early days of macontosh.) And I'm sure they wouldn't be happy about me talking publicly about identity management corner cases. I suspect the chance they would really care to hire me is fairly low.
But if anyone from Apple ever reads this, feel free to contact me if you need more details on what inputs I provided to your system and what the responses were.
Another Update... at the end of the iforgot process, Apple is supposed to send you an update within 24 hours as to what the disposition of your password reset request will be. In the past, if you opt not to receive a PIN via a registered iProduct, I've seen them say "we're going to wait 30 days and then allow you to reset your password." I imagine this is to discourage "bad actors" from launching massive efforts of password resetting. If a bad guy was able to convince Apple that they were the TRUE owner of an account, maybe that would give them an advantage in stealing services or user data. So sure, introducing a waiting time is not the worst idea in the world.
About 15 hours ago, I went through the process again and the response was (and I paraphrase) "tsk. tsk. do not annoy us with your password reset attempts. we're going to tell you more about how to recover in 15 hours." Again... annoying, but not horrible. If we're trying to make things difficult for bad actors, this isn't that big of an annoyance.
But at the end of the 24 hour waiting period, I still hadn't received an email from Apple at either of the email accounts I had used while trying to reset my AppleId. (The first is the one the AppleId was explicitly tied to and the second was an alt I use mostly for newsletters and subscribing to web site updates I'm halfway interested in. I used that because I couldn't remember if I had ever told Apple about that address.) And that seemed frustrating. You told me you were going to send me info about resetting my password, but you've welched on the deal.
And then I had a disturbing thought... Several years ago I created an AppleId with my work phone and a completely different throw-away gmail address. After digging up the password for that account, I logged in and sure enough... there's the email from Apple.
The only thing I can think is Apple tied my IP Address or location to all three email addresses involved and somehow conflated them together. I send a reset request from me@not-a-gmail-domain.com and get a response on havent_used_this_address_in_a_year@gmail.com. That is very, very weird.
But the good news is Apple says I only have to wait 7 days to reset the password on this account.
I've been thinking about getting back into writing code for the PinePhone I bought a few years ago. Maybe I will get a pre-paid t-mob or mint sim and try to create a new AppleId at a coffee shop on the far side of town.
I can't say this has filled me with a great deal of optimism. Obviously this isn't happening very often and I'm a corner case. Otherwise we would surely have heard from thousands of people saying "I can't log into my Apple account!" I'm also sure that when the Apple people were thinking through the process flows, they didn't assume I might try to reset my password while in the 24 hour iForgot wait state.
I had been a registered Apple Developer since the late 80s, though the email address in question was only attached to my dev account since around 2006. AppleIds as we know them have gone through changes... 2FA... removing questions... adding the ability to reset from an iProduct. My guess is my id was generated shortly after AppleIds became a thing. Then I stopped using it for a while and they changed the schema of the database holding AppleID details and maybe I didn't log in during some critical time frame. Then I tried to log in and got marked as a bad guy trying to attack the security of Apple's user credential integrity. I'm not... but of course, if I was I wouldn't admit it.
In any event, I'm sure my original AppleId is hopelessly horked. And that id was tied to the mobile number I've had since 1998. I suspect if I try to use that number again, apple will take a look at my IP geolocation, match it to previous attempts to recover the password and assume I'm again a bad guy trying to do bad things. If this hypothesis is correct, maybe my neighbors will have problems registering iProducts.
Apple can, of course, do whatever the heck it wants. I suspect they don't care enough to modify their processes because the number of people wedged in this state are vanishingly small. Millions (billions?) of AppleIds have been registered. Who cares if some dude from Seattle can't ever access Apple services with email or phone identifiers they want to use.
I suspect the answer to this is going to be:
a) spin up an entirely new email address. I don't think apple will have a problem with me using gmail as I'm sure they have millions of customers that already use it.
b) get a new phone number. Like I said, I was thinking about doing some coding on my PinePhonePro, so that's not a completely bad idea.
c) go across town to a coffee shop (or maybe the Apple store, do they have free wifi there?) and register a new AppleId.
d) NEVER FORGET THE PASSWORD I USED.
e) NEVER USE THAT AppleId AT MY HOME.
This is probably overkill, but Apple has successfully hidden the details of their user credential processes and I have to imply state and state transitions from their public behaviour. I really don't want to spent too much more time on this. (Now that I think about it... the problems we had with our dev certificate a few years back absolutely had the same "actual state is hidden behind an opaque wall of process" characteristic.)
All these problems are, I'm sure, Apple's way of limiting the effectiveness of social engineering attacks. And that's something I can respect. But if you're the by-catch of Apple's dragnet, it's absolutely annoying.