How do you manage your Apple accounts at work and at home?
If you receive a Mac from work, often times it requires an iCloud account. If you for example, want to respond to iMessages, or listen to your Music, you would have to login with your personal account.
If you were to create a separate iCloud account, then you will basically need to have two subscriptions for Music for example. And different ids you are contactable at.
In addition, assuming that they don't need to do password entry, an admin could view some contents of your iCloud account.
Is there a solution to this that might not be commonly known? Does this actually require me to have a separate iCloud account for work and home, and a separate Mac for work and home?
I understand that Apple are releasing a work and home mode for safari to help with some of this personal usage, but I think it is an issue, and a waste for people to maintain multiple iCloud accounts, purchase multiple machines, and have notes and other materials scattered across machines and accounts. At the same time, the company has an interest to be able to update or wipe the machine in case of security issues.
Would appreciate your opinions.
43 comments
[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 97.0 ms ] threadPerhaps you could remote into your personal mac for iMessage/Music? It would be clunky but would protect your privacy.
I create a new iCloud account with my work email and use that. I never use my iCloud account in my company’s hardware [0].
If I want to listen to music, I play it from my personal iPhone, which I have with me all the time and has all my personal accounts.
0: This is the same as I would use my work email to create a GitHub account and join my company’s organization, etc
I find Apple’s offering too restrictive even if lossless listening is tempting.
I'm much more concerned about accidentally syncing work things out to iCloud than syncing personal things into my work environment.
/Users/<username>/Pictures/Photos Library.photoslibrary/originals
If another user is a domain administrator (and depending on your AD configuration) they may be able to access the files in your home directory. Might want to check on that!
I’ve done this before to recover photos when moving around laptops.
My concern with logging into my Apple ID on my work Mac is that there is cached data installed locally. Things like messages, photos, even tabs from other devices if you’re syncing Safari… there’s just too much to consider that could potentially be recovered by IT. I think (hope) most of this stuff is encrypted (like I think iMessages is) but it still gives me pause.
Would love to be educated otherwise!
I have my work account as a member of the family group, and that seems to work well.
So, I think you can have the Mac and app store on a work id and then Messages and Music on your personal ID.
Not a perfect solution, but works pretty well for me.
Heck, I don't even check Hacker News or sign into the browser from my work machine. Laptops are lightweight. I just keep two nearby so I can work from one and goof off using the other.
I learn never to cross pollinate.
If I want to use my Apple Music subscription, then I’ll use my iPhone.
Your work laptop is not your laptop.
Make seperate account and just abandon then when you switch jobs.
I encrypt and email my weekly notes or reports to build my resume or send personal things home from work if necessary.
I tried using apple notes for sync between iOS/macOS/pc and it fails due to slow or no updates. Only work around I found is pin/unpin each note which gets annoying.
My co-worker uses a personal PC laptop and remotes into a work PC so he controls what work sees.
A couple of caveats, though: Apple encourages using the same account for everything, and their interfaces try to autopilot you into that setup. You have to pay attention, and find & choose the "I'll set it up myself" options. Also, Apple uses email addresses as the name/identifier for Apple IDs, so to set up multiple IDs, you need multiple email addresses. iCloud includes an optional email account, do it's easy to use that for the iCloud account yourself and your personal email address for the other.
Which reminds me: don't tie your personal stuff (iCloud, purchases, whatever) to an Apple ID under your company email address. If it's stuff you should keep after leaving your current job, it should be under an Apple ID that's tied to an email address you'll still have after leaving the job. On the other hand, for things that're part of the job (e.g. apps purchased by the company for the job), it should be under an Apple ID "owned by" the company and tied to a company-controlled email address.
This makes it easier to keep track of which IDs you are using, etc; makes it harder for you to goof off while working; and reduces the opportunities for work to intrude on your personal time.
I don't generally mix and match work devices and home devices... I have email (via Outlook) on my phone, but things like texts, contacts, photos, and copy / paste between devices I don't want between personal and work devices.
If I need to get files between devices I just use AirDrop.
I've seen people unintentionally leak personal info that they did not want their employer finding out by work and personal mixing things, either through carelessness or raw stupidity. Don't sign up for Ashley Madison with your work email or text your sugar baby from your work iPhone, don't download porn or buy drugs on the dark web with your work laptop.
Just don't do it.