5 Check the Headline and Sender
If you think you’ve received a fraudulent e-mail, a sure-fire way to identify it as such is to check the message headline first. In this example, we received an e-mail message allegedly sent from Apple. Apple, Inc. would never send its customers such a poorly organized message, let alone from “Apple ID.”
The origin e-mail address, which is clearly not in any way related to Apple Support or iCloud, either. no-replysnotificationaccountlogins@newsletter-01vannenza-01.apple.com is a clear giveaway that the message is fake.
The company’s main Apple Support address is AppleSupport@InsideApple.apple.com.