this post was submitted on 24 May 2024
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Apple

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[–] inlandempire@jlai.lu 1 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

Apple repeatedly emphasizes that this problem was rare and affected a small number of users and a small number of photos. The company did not and does not have access to a user’s photos or video.

This is still a disconcerting issue, but there is comfort to be taken in the fact that the photos in question were not stored in iCloud and could not have resurfaced on a device after it was properly erased and sold.

Oh, if they say so themselves then I trust them 100% always trust the culprit words, thank you Apple for telling the truth (it's the truth because they said so)

Edit : apologies if this comment came off as aggressive, I did not check the community I was in ; I totally understand you guys would be less skeptical of apple than I am

[–] QuarterSwede@lemmy.world 11 points 5 months ago

Tl;Dr: They’re saying pretty much what we expected.

Well, it does jive with what all the tech folks expected since it follows how OSs have always deleted files by deleting only the meta data. This is how recovery programs are able to recover corrupted and deleted data. This is obviously a simplified version but you get the idea.

[–] dohpaz42@lemmy.world 7 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I mean, maybe. But at the same time, they are the authoritative source for all things Apple. I’m sure they do downplay or exaggerate things, but that doesn’t mean they’re outright lying about everything. Then again, you could say that about any company in any sector. Be it Apple, Google, Samsung, or someone else, if you really don’t trust them, why do you use them?

That’s a never-ending death spiral of paranoia you won’t get away from. The only way to get close is to go 100% off-grid, no technology, no human contact, grow your own everything. Maybe that’s for some people, and kudos to them. But that’s not for me.

Pick your battles. Don’t sweat the petty stuff (nor pet the sweaty stuff). Also, don’t post anything you wouldn’t want the world to see if Tech Giant were to be hacked.

Also:

  1. search yourself online and remove yourself from all of those people search websites
  2. Freeze your credit accounts when you’re not actively using them
  3. Always set up 2FA (TOTP preferred, as SMS is weak) when available
  4. Use a password manager (like Keepass) and randomize all of your passwords
  5. Use at least 20-character long passwords when you can
  6. Complain loudly to websites that cap passwords at less
  7. Check haveibeenpwned.com for each email you use regularly
  8. Suppress your Lexus Nexis public data
  9. For US citizens, add yourself to the National Do Not Call Registry

Be proactive and not reactive.

[–] inlandempire@jlai.lu 2 points 5 months ago

Those are good tips for the uninitiated, thanks for sharing!