9to5Mac: ‘Apple Elaborates on iOS 17.5 Bug That Resurfaced Deleted Photos’
Chance Miller, reporting for 9to5Mac:
Earlier this week, Apple released iOS 17.5.1 to address a
rare problem where deleted photos would reappear on a user’s
device after installing iOS 17.5. In the release notes,
Apple said this was caused by “database corruption.” The company
has now confirmed a few additional details to 9to5Mac to further
clarify the situation.
One question many people had is how images from dates as far back
as 2010 resurfaced because of this problem. After all, most people
aren’t still using the same devices now as they were in 2010.
Apple confirmed to me that iCloud Photos is not to be blamed for
this. Instead, it all boils to the corrupt database entry that
existed on the device’s file system itself.
According to Apple, the photos that did not fully delete from a
user’s device were not synced to iCloud Photos. Those files were
only on the device itself. However, the files could have persisted
from one device to another when restoring from a backup,
performing a device-to-device transfer, or when restoring from an
iCloud Backup but not using iCloud Photos.
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Chance Miller, reporting for 9to5Mac:
Earlier this week, Apple released iOS 17.5.1 to address a
rare problem where deleted photos would reappear on a user’s
device after installing iOS 17.5. In the release notes,
Apple said this was caused by “database corruption.” The company
has now confirmed a few additional details to 9to5Mac to further
clarify the situation.
One question many people had is how images from dates as far back
as 2010 resurfaced because of this problem. After all, most people
aren’t still using the same devices now as they were in 2010.
Apple confirmed to me that iCloud Photos is not to be blamed for
this. Instead, it all boils to the corrupt database entry that
existed on the device’s file system itself.
According to Apple, the photos that did not fully delete from a
user’s device were not synced to iCloud Photos. Those files were
only on the device itself. However, the files could have persisted
from one device to another when restoring from a backup,
performing a device-to-device transfer, or when restoring from an
iCloud Backup but not using iCloud Photos.