iCloud sync fails, but internet works. Cause: The header may be corrupted by a misconfigured antivirus or a badly behaving VPN that rewrites HTTP headers. Solution: Disable VPN, firewall, or "HTTPS Inspection" temporarily. If sync resumes, add Apple domains to the bypass list.
x-apple-i-md-m: AQIDBAUGBwgJCgsMDQ4PEBESExQVFhcYGRobHB0eHyAhIiM= x-apple-i-md-m
When an iPhone sends a request to https://guzzoni.apple.com , https://api.smoot.apple.com , or even during iCloud syncing, you will see this header present. The value of x-apple-i-md-m is not human-readable. It is a compact, opaque string of alphanumeric characters. A typical example looks like this: iCloud sync fails, but internet works
App Store receipt validation returns 21004 (shared secret invalid) even with correct secret. Cause: Rarely, a stale x-apple-i-md-m from a cached request causes a replay rejection. Solution: Force the app to clear NSURLCache and retry. Conclusion: Respect the Artifact The x-apple-i-md-m header is a perfect example of Apple’s philosophy: private, secure, and opaque. It is not a bug, a vulnerability, or a hidden tracker. It is a sophisticated device attestation mechanism that underpins the reliability of iCloud, MDM, and the App Store. If sync resumes, add Apple domains to the bypass list