Apple needs to explain that bug that resurfaced deleted photos

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Sujet : Apple needs to explain that bug that resurfaced deleted photos
De : REMOVETHISbadgolferman (at) *nospam* gmail.com (badgolferman)
Groupes : misc.phone.mobile.iphone
Date : 21. May 2024, 17:31:18
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Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <xn0om327cd310t0001@reader443.eternal-september.org>
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Earlier today, Apple issued a fix in iOS and iPadOS 17.5.1. Patching
buggy software is a good, normal thing. But that’s not the issue here.
The issue is that the fix “addresses a rare issue where photos that
experienced database corruption could reappear in the Photos library
even if they were deleted” — and that’s all Apple has to say about it.

On iOS, deleted photos technically spend 30 days in the Recently
Deleted folder before disappearing for good, but the intent to send a
photo to digital oblivion is still there. A reasonable person would
expect a deleted file to stay that way. That’s why it’s understandable
that people freaked out last week when photos deleted years ago had
suddenly reappeared in their iPhone photo library.

This is obviously a privacy concern. It raises valid questions as to
how Apple stores photo data and whether iPhone owners can truly trust
that their deleted data is actually deleted. The Verge has reached out
to Apple multiple times to comment publicly on the matter but has yet
to receive a response. Doing so would at least shed light on why this
bug happened, what’s been done to fix it, and what it’s doing to ensure
that this won’t happen again. However, Apple has yet to respond.

What’s troubling is that, so long as Apple remains silent, we have no
idea of how far this bug goes. Some iPhone owners have reported the
same thing happening with deleted voicemails. Did the bug only impact
people who use iCloud photo backups? Another post claimed that old
photos appeared on an iPad that was sold to another person. All today’s
fix confirms that this bug did exist, it was a problem, and it had
something to do with database corruption. And by ignoring requests to
comment publicly on the matter, it doesn’t impart confidence that this
won’t happen again.

Sure, you could push your glasses up your nose and say, “Well actually,
no file is ever really deleted until it’s overwritten...” And while
that is true, a reasonable customer would expect that when Apple says a
deleted file is permanently deleted, this sort of thing shouldn’t even
be possible.

Mistakes and goofs happen. Cybersecurity researchers find bugs and
vulnerabilities all the time. Often, they report the issues to the
companies involved before they can be exploited and only divulge the
weaknesses after they’ve been fixed. It’d be reasonable if Apple wanted
to wait until the bug was fixed to prevent bad actors from exploiting
the situation. However, that doesn’t give them the pass to stay mum on
the issue forever.

If anything, Apple ought to comment simply because it markets itself as
a company that cares about your privacy. It’s spent countless WWDC
keynotes talking about software updates to keep your data encrypted so
that not even Apple knows what’s going on on your phone. That you can
trust its services because privacy is a fundamental, core tenet of its
philosophy. Responsible disclosure and transparency are the hallmarks
of a company that truly believes in protecting your privacy. Brushing
things under the rug? Not so much.

https://www.theverge.com/2024/5/20/24161152/apple-ios-17-photo-bug

Date Sujet#  Auteur
23 Dec 24 o 

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