On May 20, Apple launched iOS 17.5.1 to repair a bug customers had discovered just a few days prior in iOS 17.5 that resurfaced outdated photos that had been beforehand deleted. So far, the replace appears to have resolved the difficulty, however customers had been left questioning precisely what had occurred. Now Apple has clarified the difficulty considerably, describing the character of the bug to 9to5Mac.
Apple informed the publication that the photos weren’t regurgitated from iCloud Photos after being deleted on the native machine; quite, they had been native to the machine. Apple says they had been neither left within the cloud after deletion nor synced to it after, and the corporate didn’t have entry to the deleted photos.
The photos had been retained on the native machine storage as a result of a database corruption concern, and the bug resurfaced photos that had been flagged for deletion however weren’t truly totally deleted domestically.
That easy clarification does not totally cowl all of the extensively reported edge circumstances some customers had introduced up in boards and on Reddit, however Apple provided extra solutions for these, too.
The firm claimed that when customers reported the photos resurfacing on a tool apart from the one they had been initially deleted on, it was all the time as a result of that they had restored from a backup apart from iCloud Photos or carried out a direct switch from one machine to a different.
One person on Reddit claimed (the submit has now been deleted) that that they had wiped an iPad, offered it to a good friend, and the good friend then noticed photos resurface. Apple informed 9to5Mac that is unattainable if the person adopted the anticipated process for wiping the machine, which is to go to “Settings,” “General,” “Transfer and Reset,” and “Erase All Content and Settings.”
The bug was significantly nasty when it comes to optics and person belief for Apple, however it could have been far worse if it was iCloud-related and concerned deleted photos staying on or being uploaded to Apple’s servers. If what the corporate informed 9to5Mac is true, that was not the case.
Still, it is a good reminder that in lots of circumstances, a deleted file is not essentially deleted, both as a result of a bug like this, the character of the storage tech, or in another circumstances on different platforms, a deliberate alternative.