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Apple's New Hide My Email Domain Makes It Easier to Block iCloud Aliases

Apple's decision to move Hide My Email to a dedicated "private.icloud.com" domain appears to have the consequence of making it easier for platforms that want to block iCloud aliases to do so.

iCloud General Feature Redux
Apple is unifying the email domains used by Sign in with Apple and ‌iCloud‌+ Hide My Email under a single private.icloud.com domain later this summer. Sign in with Apple currently uses privaterelay.appleid.com, while Hide My Email uses icloud.com, the same domain as standard ‌iCloud‌ email addresses.

That shared domain has historically made it difficult for services to selectively block disposable ‌iCloud‌ addresses. Blocking icloud.com outright would also block legitimate users with standard Apple email accounts. With the new subdomain, that tradeoff disappears.

@vxdb on X was among the first to flag the implication: "platforms who want to ban ‌iCloud‌ aliases can now do so by banning this new subdomain without affecting all ‌iCloud‌ users." Others online noted that email services, signup flows, and anti-abuse systems will now have a clean, unambiguous target if they choose to restrict alias-generated addresses.

Apple has said that existing addresses on legacy domains will continue to work and that mail will be forwarded with no interruption, so current Hide My Email users won't lose access to their aliases. New addresses generated after the migration, however, will feature the private.icloud.com domain, and it is those addresses that become blockable in isolation for the first time.

Tag: iCloud

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Top Rated Comments

20 hours ago at 07:51 am

The private emails expire after a few minutes anyways, and was only meant for initial logins. Is there a way to permanently have private emails? Are multiple iCloud accounts possible?
I think you're thinking of other temporary email address services. The Hide My Email addresses last until you delete them.
Score: 36 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Timpetus Avatar
20 hours ago at 07:46 am
Seems like someone at Apple should have thought of this before they changed it. I use Hide My Email frequently when signing up at a site I don't trust not to spam me or sell my email. I suppose them blocking aliases will be the indication that my mistrust was warranted, and in some cases it'll mean I don't even get the initial email(s) I expect when signing up.
Score: 28 Votes (Like | Disagree)
gaximus Avatar
20 hours ago at 07:50 am
This will make it so much easier for me to NOT create accounts on scammy sites.
Score: 24 Votes (Like | Disagree)
gaximus Avatar
20 hours ago at 07:52 am

The private emails expire after a few minutes anyways, and was only meant for initial logins. Is there a way to permanently have private emails? Are multiple iCloud accounts possible?
I don't think this is true, I have over 300 hide-my-emails, and they all seem to still work if I try to send any of them an email.
Score: 21 Votes (Like | Disagree)
CapitalIdea Avatar
20 hours ago at 08:08 am
I actually view this is as good thing. Any company that wants to block my email alias doesn’t deserve my business or patronage.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
erikkfi Avatar
20 hours ago at 07:43 am
This was obvious as soon as they announced it. I'm sure Apple factored this into their thinking and went ahead anyway.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)