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The Oleg Pliss affair: Apple devices hijacked in Australia

Instructions for recovering locked devices without ransom are available at Apple.com.

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“Oleg Pliss” strikes again. Screengrab: The Age

“Oleg Pliss” strikes again. Screengrab: The Age

FORTUNE — The first report appeared on Apple’s (AAPL) support site Monday at 4:47 a.m. from a user in Melbourne, Australia, who called herself veritylikestea.

Within 24 hours, the discussion veritylikestea started had generated 230 replies, 11,000 views and — this being Apple — at least 20 news stories. Whoever was passing themselves off as Oleg Pliss (the name of a senior software engineer at Oracle) had struck perhaps a dozen users, most of them in Australia and New Zealand.

So far, there have been no reports of ransoms being paid. Users who had set a passcode on their devices were able to unlock them the usual way. Users who hadn’t could call Apple support or follow the instructions at iOS: Forgot passcode or device disabled.

It’s not clear how the highjacking was carried out. The leading theory is that someone bought or hacked their way into a list of Australian iCloud e-mail addresses and passwords.