If you set up Family Sharing, choose a family member to view their purchases. Note: You can see purchases made by family members only if they choose to share their purchases.
Family members will be able to see a description of the payment method used, such as Apple Pay, but will not be able to see payment details, such as full payment account number. Family members will automatically get access to the organizer's purchases and can opt in to share their purchases with other family members.
Your Apple Account or phone numbers will be shown to the people you contact or share data with, and people can reach you using your Apple Account, and email addresses or phone numbers on your account. You can choose how people can reach you by going to Settings > [your name] > Personal Information.
Go to icloud.com/settings, then sign in to your Apple Account (if necessary). in the top-right corner of the window, then click iCloud Settings. Below Look Me Up By Email, click Manage Apps. To prevent an app from showing your name and email address to other users, deselect the app's checkbox in the list.
It also includes personal information that you store with Apple and share across devices, like contacts, payment info, photos, device backups, and much more. If someone else has access to your Apple Account, they can view information that is synced across devices, which may include such things as Messages and location.
And when you use Apple Pay with credit, debit, or prepaid cards, Apple doesn't retain any transaction information that can be tied back to you. Your transactions stay between you, the merchant or developer, and your bank or card issuer.
When the family organizer turns on purchase sharing, everyone in your family gets access to apps, music, movies, TV shows, and books that family members buy. The family organizer is billed for family members' purchases.
Until you are old enough to have your own account, your Parent is the owner or co-owner of your account. This means they can check your activity and see how you spend your money.
With Family Sharing, you and up to five other family members can share access to Apple services like iCloud+, Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple Fitness+, Apple News+, and Apple Arcade. Your group can also share iTunes, Apple Books, and App Store purchases. You can even help locate each other's missing devices.
Only the organiser and parents/guardians are able to see information about the child's transactions in the App Store, the iTunes Store and Apple Books, see and manage their online activity through Screen Time, and enable parental controls.
You can't permanently delete your iPhone purchase history, but you can hide the apps you've installed from the App Store. In the App Store, tap your profile photo, select Purchased, and choose My Purchases to see apps you've bought or installed for free. To delete an app from your purchases, swipe left and choose Hide.
If a family member has hidden one of their purchases, no one in their family can see it.
If you're sharing an iCloud storage plan, each person's files and documents remain private, while the amount of storage space being used by each person is visible to all members. To see if you're part of a Family Sharing group, go to Settings > [your name] > Family.
Note: You can see purchases made by family members only if they choose to share their purchases. Purchases made with Family Sharing may not be accessible after the family member leaves the family group. The family organizer can review and approve eligible purchases made by other family members under a certain age.
Go to Settings > Wallet & Apple Pay. Tap a card, then do any of the following: Tap Transactions to view your recent history. To hide this information, turn off Show History.
Transactions and comments sent by children using Apple Cash Family are visible to parents, guardians and the family organizer.
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.
If you backup or synchronize your phone to iCloud then anybody who has the details for that account, or even has their phone connected to the same account (a family member, for example), could potentially see your personal text messages.