Scammers often try to trick you into sharing personal or financial information by sending you messages or links to websites that might look like they’re from Apple, but their actual purpose is to steal your account information. Some phishing emails will ask you to click on a link to update your account information. Others might look like a receipt for a purchase in the App Store, iTunes Store, iBooks Store or for Apple Music, that you’re certain you didn’t make.

Never enter your account information on websites linked from these messages, and never download or open attachments included within them.

At the designated time a notification will appear, reminding you that you need to reply to that important email. To create a reminder: Launch the Mail app and open the email you need to reply to. Open your Mac’s ‘Applications’ folder, and launch the ‘Reminders’ app. Drag this email into your ‘Reminders’ app and drop it into the list. Creating a Reminder for an Email. Launch the Mail app on your Mac by clicking on Launchpad in your dock and searching for and clicking on Mail. When the app launches, select the email you wish to be reminded about by clicking on the email.

Is this email legitimate?

If you receive an email about an App Store or iTunes Store purchase, and you’re not sure whether it is real, you can look for a couple of things that can help confirm that the message is from Apple.

Genuine purchase receipts—from purchases in the App Store, iTunes Store, iBooks Store, or Apple Music—include your current billing address, which scammers are unlikely to have. You can also review your App Store, iTunes Store, iBooks Store, or Apple Music purchase history.

Emails about your App Store, iTunes Store, iBooks Store, or Apple Music purchases will never ask you to provide this information over email:

  • Social Security Number
  • Mother's maiden name
  • Full credit card number
  • Credit card CCV code

Learn more about phishing and other scams.

Update your account info safely

If you receive an email asking you to update your account or payment information, only do so in Settings directly on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch; in iTunes or the App Store on your Mac; or in iTunes on a PC.

Dvr-k17 drivers for mac. To update your password for the Apple ID that you use for purchases, do so only in Settings on your device or at appleid.apple.com.

Learn more about security and your Apple ID.

If you received or acted on a likely phishing message:

If you received a suspicious email, please forward it to reportphishing@apple.com. If you're on a Mac, select the email and choose Forward As Attachment from the Message menu.

If you think you might have entered personal information like a password or credit card info on a scam website, immediately change your Apple ID password.

I don't have enough time to write the AppleScript (release going out soon!), but there's no way to do it 'automatically' without setting up a reoccurring task with launchd. Make it so that the script gets run at a regular interval (maybe every 5 minutes or so).

I glanced through the AppleScript library viewer and didn't see anything for creating reminders in Reminders.app, but this functionality should be available in Automator.

Sorry I can't help more; play around with automator, and be sure to set the resulting script up with launchd so it runs on a regular basis.