It was a sense of foreboding that prompted Gloria Fuentes to delete several apps from her phone ahead of an Apple store appointment last week in Bakersfield, California.
Fuentes scrubbed her device of all social media, financial and banking apps before getting her screen repaired Nov. 4 - and intended to delete all of her photos, too - but she ran out of time. Upon arriving, she handed her phone to an employee who began "messing around with it for quite a while," she wrote on Facebook the next day.
"I didn't really pay any mind to it because I just figured he's doing his job, looking into my insurance info or whatever," she wrote. "He asked for my passcode TWICE in that time frame which I, at the time, didn't think anything of."
It turns out Fuentes's initial concerns were legitimate. When she got home, Fuentes turned on her phone and noticed a text that had been sent to an unknown number, she wrote. She said the Apple employee had gone through her device, retrieved a private photo and texted it to himself.
The picture in question was taken more than a year ago, she added.