Macworld - USA (2021-08)

(Antfer) #1

104 MACWORLD AUGUST 2021


WORKINGMAC i CLOUD+ PRIVATE RELAY

through two internet “hops,” or relays. Your
data is encrypted and then sent to Apple,
so your ISP can’t see any of your web
browsing requests. Once at Apple’s proxy
server, the DNS request (the thing that
points a domain name like “macworld.
com” to a specific server IP address) and
your iPhone or Mac’s IP address are
separated. Your IP address is retained by
Apple, while your DNS request is passed
on, encrypted, to a “trusted partner” that
has the decryption key, along with a fake
intermediary IP address that is based on
your approximate location. Apple didn’t
name its partners, but some web sleuths
have figured out that they are major
internet backbone companies such as
Akami, Cloudfare, and Fastly.
This means that Apple knows your IP
address but
not the name
of the sites
you’re visiting,
and the
trusted partner
knows the site
you’re visiting
but not your IP
(and therefore
not who you
are). Neither
party can
piece together
a complete

Here’s what this Private Relay feature is,
how it works, and how it’s different from
a traditional VPN.


WHAT IS iCLOUD PRIVATE
RE L AY?
Once you upgrade to iOS 15, you’ll find a
new setting in the iCloud Settings menu:
Private Relay. Assuming that you pay for
any iCloud plan and therefore have the
iCloud+ service, you can simply turn on
this switch to enable iCloud Private Relay.
That’s it—nothing to install or configure.
There’s an IP Address Location setting that
lets you preserve your approximate
location or use a broader location, but
most users can ignore that.
When this is enabled, all of your
browsing activity in Safari will be routed

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