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Weird email domain from “Your Apple Account information has been updated”

I got two separate emails hours apart of my apple account information updated. The first had my name in it but it says my account name but a very weird email domain: @greenturtleresort.apple.account.com. I shortly got another email that was to another person’s name and had my email again but with a different domain @bunah-vitagreengarden.appleaccount.com


I quickly changed my password as this seems super suspicious. but does anyone know what may be happening and why there are weird email domains?

iPhone 14 Pro, iOS 18

Posted on Nov 14, 2024 3:12 PM

Reply
5 replies

Nov 19, 2024 4:22 AM in response to RobinAY

Those are not emails from Apple. Criminals are getting very good at imitating Apple messages and sometimes the only indication in an email is very subtle. Have a look at this thread. Someone registered an Apple ID with my em… - Apple Community It can be very hard to tell from an email alone if it is authentic. The best way to check is to use an independent way through Apple's own resources to confirm what the communication claims. Scams (e-mail, text messages, and phone calls) are getting very good at closely imitating true Apple communications. Always be cautious. These support articles have some guidelines:


About identifying legitimate emails from the App Store and iTunes Store --> Identify legitimate emails from the App Store or iTunes Store - Apple Support


Recognize and avoid social engineering schemes including phishing messages, phony support calls, and other scams - Recognize and avoid social engineering schemes including phishing messages, phony support calls, and other scams - Apple Support


Avoid scams when you use Apple Cash --> Avoid scams when you use Apple Cash - Apple Support


About Gift Card Scams --> About Gift Card Scams - Official Apple Support


If you are uncertain about a message and a resource provided in that message, do not click on any links in the message. Try to use an Apple resource you know is valid to independently verify what the message is claiming. Go to a support article page on apple.com and use the instructions in the article to verify though Apple itself, or use an Apple device feature such as Settings or an Apple app. To ask Apple start at this web page: Official Apple Support


- Apple e-mails address you by your real name, not something like "Dear Customer", "Dear Client", or an e-mail address* However, having your actual name is not proof this isn’t phishing. Compromised databases may have your name and address in them.

- Apple e-mails originate from @apple.com or @itunes.com but it is possible to spoof a sender address. "Apple email related to your Apple ID account always comes from appleid@id.apple.com." - About your Apple Account email addresses - Apple Support

- Set your email to display Show Headers or Show Original to view Received From. Apple emails originate from IP addresses starting with "17.".

- Mouse-over links to see if they direct to real Apple web sites. Do not click on them as this just tells the spammer they have a working e-mail address in their database. If you are unsure, contact Apple using a link from the Apple.com web site, not one in an email.

- Phishing emails may include account suspension or similar threats in order to panic you into clicking on a link without thinking. They may report a fake purchase in order to infuriate you into rashly clicking on a false link to report a problem. March 2018 post by Niel There was a fraudulent order on my apple … - Apple Community - "Emails saying that your Apple ID has been locked or disabled are always phishing. If one actually gets disabled, its owner will be told when they try logging into it instead of through email."

- Apple will not ask for personal information in an e-mail and never for a social security number.

- Scams may have bad grammar or spelling mistakes.

- Apple will not phone you unless it is in response to a request from you to have them call you.


* Exception: I got email saying my ID is expired! Does… - Apple Community


Forward email attempts as an attachment (in MacOS Mail use the paperclip icon) to: reportphishing@apple.com then delete it.





Nov 14, 2024 3:19 PM in response to RobinAY

> but does anyone know what may be happening and why there are weird email domains?


The answer is simple - these are phishing emails sent by spammers. They're designed to trick you into thinking they're legitimate, hoping that you click the links and login to their site, thereby giving them unfettered access to your account.


They're the bane of the internet, but the limited controls on email systems make this kind of thing easy to do.


The 'weird' domain is designed to catch the unwary... when this thing started many years ago, people were initially taught to look at the sender to decide if the message was legit - some people will see 'apple' in the address "scumbag@hereto.takeover.your.apple.com.address" and trust it, without looking at the whole picture, or understanding how domain names work.


The good thing is you recognized it before any damage was done.

Nov 14, 2024 3:28 PM in response to Camelot

The thing is, after I changed my email they sent another email under the first two emails saying it has been changed. The email was from appleid@id.apple.com and had a blue verified tick as well so these emails are definitely from apple. Just very confused about the weird email domains. To clarify, the weird email domains are contained in the emails with my account email address, just a different email domain. For example, it says my account “myaccount”@turtlebayresort.appleaccount.com has been changed recently instead of “myaccount”gmail.com

Weird email domain from “Your Apple Account information has been updated”

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