Entertainment
Apple’s ‘Hide My Email’ feature is reportedly leaking email addresses
A major vulnerability has been discovered in one of the core privacy features that Apple offers its customers. And according to the cybersecurity researchers who discovered the exploit, this issue appears to have been ongoing for more than a year.
Apple’s “Hide My Email” is a privacy feature that obscures a user’s email address by generating a unique iCloud email address, which then forwards emails to the user’s main email address. The feature allows users to receive emails without revealing their personal email address.
According to a new report from 404 Media, a vulnerability allows anyone to discover the email address behind the “Hide My Email” address Apple creates.
The vulnerability, which the outlet isn’t revealing because it is still exploitable, was discovered by online privacy company EasyOptOuts. 404 Media has also independently confirmed that the exploit exists.
Typically, before an exploit is revealed to the public, researchers report their discovery to the company and give the company a reasonable amount of time to fix the vulnerability. According to EasyOptOut, they informed Apple more than a year ago, yet the vulnerability still exists.
Mashable Light Speed
”Apple Hide My Email is leaking email addresses that are supposed to be hidden,” said EasyOptOuts cofounder Tyler Murphy. “We reported the issue and replication instructions to Apple over a year ago. We don’t know why it hasn’t been fixed, but we don’t feel comfortable waiting any longer. Hide My Email users deserve to know that it may be possible for attackers to discover their hidden email addresses.”
Murphy told 404 Media that the issue was reported to Apple in June 2025. The company said it “addresses” the issue in March 2026. However, Murphy discovered the vulnerability still existed.
“We don’t know the full scope of the issue, but in our limited tests with volunteers, 100% of Hide My Email addresses were exploitable,” Murphy told 404 Media.
Apple last told Murphy that it was “still investigating this issue” in May.
Hide My Email is a feature available to paying iCloud+ subscribers. It has several use cases. For example, users may use a Hide My Email-generated email address to sign up for mailing lists so they don’t get spammed at their real email address. Or they may sign up for a website using a Hide My Email address if they don’t want their main address linked to that site.
In June, TechCrunch reported that Apple was planning to make changes to the Hide My Email feature that could render it useless for users. Currently, the generated anonymous Hide My Email address utilizes the “iCloud.com” domain, which is also used by people who use their iCloud.com username as their main email address. In a recent note to developers, Apple announced it would move Hide My Email addresses to the “private.icloud.com” domain. This domain would be reserved for Hide My Email addresses, meaning that platforms and services could block email addresses with that domain name outright.
iCloud+ users who rely on Hide My Email may want to explore other email privacy options as Apple sorts out the feature.
Entertainment
TV’s Hottest Fantasy Actor Saved Her Career By Botching Star Wars Audition
By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

If you’re a fan of HBO’s House of the Dragon, you sometimes have to defend yourself to your more skeptical friends. If yours are anything like mine, they’ll start asking you some hard questions, like, “After Game of Thrones got so bad, why the heck would you come back for another show?” I give them all kinds of answers, of course. Sometimes, I tell them that this show is like GoT before it fell off; other times, I tell them that I’m just invested in the mythology of Westeros. While these are both true to some extent, the main reason I watch is much simpler: hot ladies in fantasy clothing!
One great example of this is Olivia Cooke. In House of the Dragon, she plays an important character: Alicent Hightower, a queen whose crumbling relationship with Rhaenyra Targaryen leads to civil war. Cooke is absolutely mesmerizing in the role, imbuing charisma and pathos to a character who makes one bad decision after another. Beneath her character’s regal bearing, she wears the effervescent beauty of the girl next door. However, we came very close to never having Cooke appear in House of the Dragon at all. In a recent interview, she admitted how close she came to getting a very different role: Rey in The Force Awakens!
From Sci-Fi To Fantasy

Recently, Olivia Cooke offered an interview to Josh Horowitz on his Happy Sad Confused podcast. There, she spoke about a wide range of topics before her host brought up something very specific. Horowitz asked her if there was any truth to the rumor that she had auditioned for a role in The Last Jedi, the controversial Star Wars film. Cooke busted this “weird rumor” before dropping some truly shocking news. While she didn’t audition for TLJ, she did audition for The Force Awakens. And not just for any role: she auditioned for Rey, the main character of the entire Sequel trilogy!
The House of the Dragon star was very self-deprecating during the interview. She confirmed that “I did audition a few times for the other one, where Daisy Ridley got [it]” before downplaying the significance of her audition. “But you know, everyone and their dog auditioned for that,” she said. She then got very candid about how she did when auditioning for the most popular sci-fi franchise in the world. “I think I auditioned once in L.A., and then once with J.J. [Abrams]. And I was sh*t. I was really bad,” she said.
Everything’s Coming Up Olivia

Does Olivia Cooke have any sour grapes over not getting the highly coveted role? Not really. During the interview, she drove home both how bad her audition performance was and how good Ridley’s was. “You know when you go into an audition, and you’re just not bringing it, and you’ve let yourself down, you’ve let everyone down in the room?” she asked rhetorically. “Daisy did such an amazing job, I just wasn’t that kind of an actor at that time. It just wasn’t a fit.” Fortunately, things worked out: she landed parts in other high-profile films like Ready Player One, eventually getting the part of Alicent Hightower in House of the Dragon.
In retrospect, things really worked out for this talented actor. As it is, she’s a major player in one of the biggest and most popular shows ever made. Had she won the part of Rey in the Star Wars Sequel Trilogy, her career might very well have suffered the same way that Daisy Ridley’s has: starring in one forgettable film after another, just waiting for Lucasfilm to give her a call back. But Olivia Cooke is absolutely thriving in a career-defining role that gives “fantasy girl” a new meaning. Will of the Force or will of the Seven? Either way, Cooke was clearly destined for greatness!
Entertainment
The Most Underappreciated Marvel Movie Is Getting A Surprise Sequel
By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

Don’t call it a comeback; they’ve been here for years! Marvel Studios is on the cusp of a kind of renaissance. Spider-Man: Brand New Day is currently on track to earn at least $1.5 billion at the box office, a number that could go even higher with positive word-of-mouth. Meanwhile, Avengers: Doomsday is releasing near the end of the year, and that movie will be bringing in cameo characters like the X-Men while reuniting the MCU’s biggest actors: Chris Evans and Robert Downey Jr. That’s a recipe for another monster hit that may cause fans to forget how ho-hum last year was.
What happened last year? Marvel released two blockbuster summer movies: The Thunderbolts and The Fantastic Four: First Steps, each of which earned less than Superman (2025), the inaugural film of the DCU. That failure stung, and most fans assumed that we wouldn’t be getting more films in either of these Marvel franchises. However, it sounds like one of these films is going to get a sequel, and it’s not the one you suspect. According to industry scooper Alex Perez, Marvel Studios is currently working on a sequel to The Thunderbolts.
Look Who’s Back

Every month, insider Alex Perez catches fans up on the latest Marvel scoops via a Q&A session on The Cosmic Circus. One fan asked if there was any news about Doctor Strange 3, and the scooper claimed that Marvel had that film on the creative backburner. According to Perez, the studio is currently prioritizing the following projects instead: “Black Panther 3, Shang-Chi 2, Spider-Man 5, The X-Men, Thunderbolts* sequel, Blade, Midnight Sons, and the next Avengers title.” Some of these are no-brainers (like Shang-Chi 2, Spider-Man 5, and the X-Men), but others are surprising. In particular, fans were shocked to discover that a Thunderbolts sequel was in development.
Why is it so shocking that Marvel is reportedly working on a Thunderbolts sequel? It all comes down to money, of course. The first film earned $382.4 million against a budget of $180 million. That looks profitable on paper, but Variety previously reported that the movie would need to earn at least $425 million just to break even. The fact that it fell so far short of that goal means that Marvel might have actually lost over $43 million on this movie. Why, then, would the studio work on another film that is likely to lose money?
The Gang’s All Here (For Now)

This could, effectively, be an investment in Disney+. While the first Thunderbolts was a dud at the box office, it became a massive streaming hit. In its first five days on Disney+, it got a whopping 702 million minutes viewed, making it the number one hit in 40 countries. If plenty of new fans checked out the first movie once it hit streaming, Disney may be gambling that a theatrical sequel will make more money. Alternatively, they might use the Thunderbolts sequel the way that Prime Video is reportedly using Masters of the Universe: as a way to recruit new streaming subscribers and retain old ones.
Alternatively, Marvel could (like the kids say) do it for the lore. The Thunderbolts sets up many of the big plot developments that will be unpacked by Avengers: Doomsday. One year after that film premieres, the MCU will get a reset via Avengers: Secret Wars. It’s possible that the Thunderbolts sequel will be used to set up other major events or to simply help audiences explore this brave new world. Finally, if Thunderbolts director Jake Schreier really wants to do the sequel, Marvel may just do him a favor; after all, they already have plenty of confidence in the man, having hired him to direct the MCU’s first X-Men movie.

So far, we don’t know who will direct or even who will star in the Thunderbolts sequel, which is significant because some characters are likely to die in Doomsday and/or Secret Wars. However, it’s definitely good news that this beloved movie (it has an 88 percent critical rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a 93 percent audience rating) is getting a follow-up film. One of the most common complaints about superhero movies is that they typically follow a cookie-cutter formula. Love it or hate it, The Thunderbolts was fiercely original, and the studio could clearly use more of that pioneering spirit as they do the unthinkable and finally reboot the MCU.
Entertainment
A new tool turns PDFs and videos into AI mind maps, and a lifetime subscription is $35 through July 5
TL;DR: GitMind turns PDFs, YouTube links, audio, and webpages into AI-generated mind maps, and a Basic Plan lifetime subscription is on sale for $34.99 through July 5.
Mind mapping apps usually assume you’ve already done the hard work of figuring out what the map should show. GitMind is a new AI workspace that ingests a PDF, YouTube link, audio file, or webpage and builds a finished visual map in seconds, and a Basic Plan lifetime subscription is on sale for $34.99 (reg. $169) for a few days longer.
Paste a YouTube URL into the app, and GitMind pulls the transcript, runs the words through its multimodal model, then arranges the key claims into a branching map you can drag and edit. Think of it like turning a college lecture into the professor’s handwritten chalkboard outline, without having to sit through the lecture twice. The same trick works for a 60-page PDF, where the thesis, methodology, and findings each get their own branch instead of leaving you to skim. Audio recordings get transcribed and visualized in the same pass. Screenshots and webpages feed into the same engine.
Mashable Deals
Researchers can feed in a stack of papers and pull a comparison map across them without manually outlining each one. Project managers can drop meeting notes and watch decisions, action items, and open questions sort themselves into separate branches. Content planners can paste a long-form interview transcript and get a story map back, ready to script from.
Past the mind maps, GitMind includes a chat feature for asking questions of any uploaded file, OCR for scanned documents, and diagram generation for workflows. Real-time collaboration handles multi-person editing on the same canvas. Privacy posture sets the app apart from most AI tools on the market right now, with user content kept out of model training.
Mashable Deals
Until July 5 at 11:59 p.m. PT, it’s only $34.99 to get a GitMind Basic Lifetime Plan.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Topics
Artificial Intelligence
