Protecting Your iPhone From the Latest Mercenary-Backed Spyware Attacks: Insights and Advice From Apple
Reviving Your Vanished Photos with iOS 17.5 - Insights From Apple and Practical Advice for iPhone Owners
Maria Diaz/ZDNET
Two weeks ago, reports began appearing of an unusual iPhone and iPad bug. Following Apple’s iOS 17.5 and iPadOS 17.5 updates , photos that users had deleted years earlier were resurfacing, even on devices that users had wiped clean.
Last week, Apple issued a patch , which the company said “provides important bug fixes and addresses a rare issue where photos that experienced database corruption could reappear in the Photos library even if they were deleted.” The bug only affected a small number of users and a small number of photos, Apple said, but for those users, it was pretty unsettling.
Also: How to transfer data from Android to an iPhone: 2 quick and simple ways
While Apple initially blamed the issue on “database corruption,” the company is now explaining more precisely what caused the problem.
Speaking to 9to5Mac , Apple elaborated that the issue wasn’t with iCloud Photos, but with the databases on the devices themselves. In short, the restored photos were ones not synced to the cloud. When a device was restored from a backup – or from a device-to-device transfer – some of those photos were restored as well (from the device backup, not from iCloud).
Newsletters
ZDNET Tech Today
ZDNET’s Tech Today newsletter is a daily briefing of the newest, most talked about stories, five days a week.
Subscribe
If you want to make sure your deleted photos are truly gone, here’s what Apple recommends you do. (Note: This is only for times when you want to wipe a device clean of everything.) Under Settings, head to General, and then “Transfer or Reset.” You’ll see an option to “Erase All Content and Settings.” Tap that, and everything on your phone will be deleted, with no chance of your data coming back in the future.
Apple says that the once-deleted, now-resurrected photos will not automatically be deleted again. You’ll need to manually go in and remove them yourself.
See also
iPhone envy? Here are 3 iOS 17 features already available on Android
5 useful iOS 17 features Apple quietly released at WWDC 2023
Your iPhone’s Wallet app is getting two big iOS 17 updates. Here they are
iPhone overheating? Here are 8 potential causes and their solutions
- iPhone envy? Here are 3 iOS 17 features already available on Android
- 5 useful iOS 17 features Apple quietly released at WWDC 2023
- Your iPhone’s Wallet app is getting two big iOS 17 updates. Here they are
- iPhone overheating? Here are 8 potential causes and their solutions
Also read:
- [New] Navigating Virtual Board Functions Across Zoom Devices
- [New] Unlocking the Potential of Your Phone & DSLR for IGTV Videos
- Boost Your System with a Windows 10 Pro Transition
- How to Fake GPS on Android without Mock Location For your Oppo A18 | Dr.fone
- In 2024, Cyberlink Reviewed Precision in Video Capturing
- In 2024, Expert Filmmaking Skills on YouTube and Diverse Platforms
- In 2024, Reasons why Pokémon GPS does not Work On Itel S23+? | Dr.fone
- Latest AOC Graphics Card Drivers for Windows 10/11/8 - Free Download & Guide
- Navigating the Challenge of Artificial Intelligence Hallucination: 6 Proven Approaches to Precise Prompting and Reduced Errors
- Navigating Through GPT Restrictions
- No License, Just Imagination: Top Free Paint Apps
- Profit Through AI Interactions & Tech Enthusiasm
- Programmatic Power of Python for GPT-3
- Title: Protecting Your iPhone From the Latest Mercenary-Backed Spyware Attacks: Insights and Advice From Apple
- Author: Jeffrey
- Created at : 2024-10-06 16:15:14
- Updated at : 2024-10-09 22:57:07
- Link: https://tech-haven.techidaily.com/protecting-your-iphone-from-the-latest-mercenary-backed-spyware-attacks-insights-and-advice-from-apple/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.