![]() ![]() This section is still there in iOS 15, except that apps using a private email address will now take you to the new “Hide my email’ settings to manage all of your private addresses in one place. Previously, you could manage these additional private email addresses by logging into your Apple ID at, or in your profile section of the iPhone/iPad Settings app, under Password & Security, Apps using Apple ID. The new “Hide my email” section in iOS 15’s settings also lets you manage all the addresses that you’ve added via Sign in with Apple over the past two years. It’s fairly clear that the only major difference here is the domain name, however, as everything has now been integrated and can be found in the same place. Most notably, the addresses are much friendlier, ending in rather than the more cumbersome domain that was used for the Sign in with Apple version. That said, the new iOS 15 and iCloud+ version of Hide My Email makes a few other changes. So, what Apple is clearly doing here is simply extending it beyond just signing up for apps and services, allowing users to create these addresses on-demand. Apple even called the feature Hide My Email from the beginning, both in support documents and in the Sign in with Apple dialog on your iPhone and iPad.
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