After iOS 17.5 was released on Monday, users started noticing that pictures they had deleted were surfacing again. The bug even impacted people who were not iCloud users, indicating that they were being restored from onboard storage. Many of the photos were years old and highly sensitive.
What makes the bug truly scary is that it can give people to whom you sold your iPhone or iPad access to your photos even if you followed Apple’s instructions for selling a device, which include signing out of iCloud and erasing your device.
This is what happened with Reddit user AnimatorAmazing190. They said they cleared their iPad before selling it and haven’t used Apple ID on that iPad since then. Luckily, their iPad was sold to a friend and not a stranger, and they informed AnimatorAmazing190 that after updating to iPad OS 17.5, they were able to view their old pictures in the Photos app. The model they were using was a 4th generation 12.9-inch iPad Pro.
I wiped the iPad using official Apple guides before selling. I never logged into that iPad with my Apple ID after erasing the iPad. I sold my iPad to a friend in September 2023, they called me today after updating to iPad OS 17.5 and said my old pictures appeared in their Photos app… HUGE PRIVACY VIOLATION. I see other reports of this. How many people will get other people’s photos on the devices they bought from other people?
UPD: please stop saying I logged back into the iPad after erasing it. I did not, I wiped it clean like shown in this guide from Apple (https://support.apple.com/en-ca/109511), then handed the iPad to my friend. Never logged in after wiping it as it would defeat the purpose of wiping it altogether.
This is a nightmare that every person who sells their old device dreads and is a privacy violation of the worst sort.
It’s one thing to have your old photos resurface on your own device, but it’s an entirely different matter if a stranger gets access to your photos.
When photos and videos are deleted on an iPhone or iPad, they are moved to the Recently Deleted album for 30 days, before being permanently deleted.
Apple has not said anything about the bug so far but let’s hope it’s taken care of before anyone’s photos fall into the wrong hands