You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

Mail not loading images from specific server in iOS15


Also posted this in the Using iPhone forum, but thought the developer forum might have more insight.


I work for an advertising agency that regularly sends out email marketing for our clients. We have noticed the last few emails we sent out have display issues in Mail.


The images are hosted on our internal server, which is how we've deployed blasts for years. The server is secure and has a valid SSL certificate. When looking at the email in Mail, these images do not load, and there is no "load remote content" option available:



When opening in any other mail client, the blast shows up as intended:



I have seen some other posts with similar issues but no suggested solutions. It seems like this is something that was changed recently - is there any recommended fix available?

Posted on Jun 25, 2022 10:01 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jun 25, 2022 10:56 AM

I’d look for an incomplete certificate chain being offered by the webserver; everything from leaf back to but excluding the trusted root.


Also for any blocks that might prevent images from being cached by intermediate servers, with Private Relay enabled on the client.


Post some testing URLs, and maybe somebody will check the webserver certificates for you.


Or embed the images into the mail messages, and the broken-image issue goes away. (Yes, I know the central purpose here is tracking advertising recipient attention—private relay makes remote image load tracking rather less effective, and which means tracking involving Apple gear is already getting more difficult. Once the recipient clicks on the image, sure, your tracking is available.)

Similar questions

6 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jun 25, 2022 10:56 AM in response to Jason1242

I’d look for an incomplete certificate chain being offered by the webserver; everything from leaf back to but excluding the trusted root.


Also for any blocks that might prevent images from being cached by intermediate servers, with Private Relay enabled on the client.


Post some testing URLs, and maybe somebody will check the webserver certificates for you.


Or embed the images into the mail messages, and the broken-image issue goes away. (Yes, I know the central purpose here is tracking advertising recipient attention—private relay makes remote image load tracking rather less effective, and which means tracking involving Apple gear is already getting more difficult. Once the recipient clicks on the image, sure, your tracking is available.)

Jun 26, 2022 10:57 AM in response to Jason1242

Jason1242 wrote:

Is there a particular SSL cert you'd recommend? I'm planning to try a cert from Let's Encrypt to start.


What I recommend is not using his whole approach; of embedding the images into the message.


LetsEncrypt certificates are free, and should work on any recent Apple products. This so long as the certificate chain from leaf up to and excluding the root is served from the web server.


LE certs will only work with macOS 10.12.6 (2017) and later, and from contemporaneous and newer iOS versions, or when the user has loaded and trusted the updated LE root certificate on an older version. As LE certs are widely used and common, uses on older versions are already aware of this.

Jun 26, 2022 3:40 PM in response to Jason1242

Jason1242 wrote:

Is there a particular SSL cert you'd recommend? I'm planning to try a cert from Let's Encrypt to start.

No, sorry. SSL certs are crazy complicated. When people have posted these questions before, they always had some custom SSL cert. I would debug it using my ssl.com or Let's Encrypt certificate and those would work fine. But even with ssl.com, the choices are mind-boggling. I usually pick the cheapest one that has organizational validation. The domain validation ones don't work with older operating system versions.


My current project involves moving all of my websites to AWS Cloudfront for no other reason than being able to use AWS's super-easy certificate features. I haven't tried an AWS certificate with this particular Mail issue, but I would be very surprised if it didn't work.

Mail not loading images from specific server in iOS15

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.