This is a feature of Handoff. Look at your FaceTime settings and Phone settings, and turn off "receive calls on other devices" Ultimately, splitting your AppleID's is the way to go. It is happening to me to and I have handoff turned off. If you are sharing an Apple ID that can also cause it.
It's a carrier feature where, if you don't answer or your line is busy, the call gets fowarded to another number. Contact your carrier for instructions on how to cancel the feature. It usually involves dialing a short code.
The common reason to this usually occurring is mainly because there is one appleID being used and signed into over two or more devices thus having contacts synced to the device. Basically, when the appleID is signed into on your husband's device, the contacts from.
You can turn off this feature; go to Settings/phone and turn off Calls on other devices. Or just turn off some devices. Do this on each device.
The simultaneously ring option is handy for people on the go. When you get a call it rings on two phone numbers at the same time. You can set your incoming calls to simultaneously ring your mobile device and another number or contact in case you're busy or momentarily unavailable.
iOS, iPadOS, and macOS form an ecosystem of devices that can work together for various tasks. One of them is Call on Other Devices. When this is enabled, selected or all Apple devices ring when you get a call on iPhone. This is not limited to FaceTime audio and video calls but even standard cellular phone calls.
Most likely, some spammer or (more likely) scammer was “spoofing” phone numbers: That is, using an IP phone and setting it up so the number is something local. It seems you hit the occasion when the person receiving the call happened to be somebody who knows you.
It is if your old iPhone uses the same Apple ID as your new iPhone and is CONNECTED TO THE SAME WiFi network as your new iPhone. Disconnect your new iPhone from WiFi and then see whether the old iPhone rings or not. On your new iPhone open Settings ➔ Phone ➔ Calls on other devices ➔ Allow calls on - Turn OFF.
Go to settings on your iPhone and iPad, then phone, then turn off "calls on other devices". Also under Messages, turn on iMessage, but look under "text message forwarding" and make sure only one phone is listed. Then double check under "Send and Receive" that only the one phone you want is checked.
From the Devices section of your Apple ID account page, you can find all of the devices that you're currently signed in to with your Apple ID, including Android devices, consoles, and smart TVs: Sign in to appleid.apple.com,* then select Devices.
First of all, if you see a persistent notification on your Android notification shade saying “Forwarding all calls” or something related, that means you or someone has activated call divert on your phone.
In Bluetooth, pairing enables two Bluetooth devices to communicate with each other. For devices to find and identify each other so they can communicate, one or both must be discoverable, which means they broadcast a Bluetooth signal other devices can detect and connect to.
If your device has more than 1 SIM and is capable of Dual SIM/Dual Standby (DSDS), you can have multiple numbers on 1 phone. With DSDS, each SIM can be activated on a separate mobile phone number.
All the critical and sensitive information will be shared mutually between the two iPhones. The other iPhone user can access all the text messages, photos, and call logs. The other person can change the playlist. The other person can change the password and lock your device.
Contact sharing can be turned off on Samsung devices by going to the Settings menu, selecting the "Accounts" option, and then selecting the "Contacts" option. From here, you can select the "Share my contact information" option and turn it off.
This means that you are both signed in on the same Apple ID. Any device that is signed in with the same Apple ID will have access to the same content. The fix for this is the create a new and different Apple ID, and then assign that Apple ID to one or the other of you.
Yes, a partner, parent, or even employer can gain remote, real-time access to your iPhone using spying software. Spyware can track your GPS location, record your keypad inputs such as credit card numbers and passwords, and monitor your calls, texts, app usage, emails, voice, and other personal data.
With Handoff, you can start something on one device (iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac, or Apple Watch) and then pick it up on another device right where you left off. For example, you can start answering an email on your iPhone, then finish it in Mail on your Mac.
Transfer call history to new iPhone with iCloud syncing (same Apple ID) If the two iPhones share the same Apple account, then transfer call history is just a piece of cake. Once you toggle it on, you can check the call history on both devices.
iPhone or iPad: Go to Settings > General > AirPlay & Handoff, then turn on Handoff. Apple Watch: In the Apple Watch app on your iPhone, tap General and turn on Enable Handoff. Apple Watch supports handing off from your watch to your iPhone or Mac.
The device stores the original number that it was activated with, and even if you change phone numbers the old directory will still be there.
If you have an iPhone and another iOS device, like an iPad, your iMessage settings might be set to receive and start messages from your Apple ID instead of your phone number. To check if your phone number is set to send and receive messages, go to Settings > Messages, and tap Send & Receive.