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iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia include a new Photos app feature designed to help users recover images and videos that are lost or damaged, providing a way to get missing content back.

icloud-photos.jpg

There is a "Recovered" album in the Utilities section of Photos, and it shows up if there are pictures or videos on a user's device that are not part of their Photos Library. If you see the Recovered album in your Photos app, tapping into it will provide an option to permanently delete or restore any pictures or video stored in the album.

Photos and videos can be lost due to database corruption issues, images taken with a camera app that did not properly get saved to the Photos library, or third-party apps that are provided with access to manage a Photo Library. Here's how to recover a lost image or video:
  1. Open the Photos app and tap into Albums.
  2. Scroll down to Utilities, and choose the Recovered album.
  3. Tap on a photo or video in the album, or use Select to select multiple items.
  4. Tap on Permanently Delete or Restore to Library.
When upgrading to iOS 18, iPadOS 18, or macOS Sequoia, an iPhone, iPad, or Mac will automatically scan for photos and videos that are able to be recovered, providing immediate access to any missing content.

Note that the Recovered album only shows up in the Utilities section of the Photos app if lost photos or videos are located on a device. If there are none, you will not see the album.

With iOS 17.5.1 and iPadOS 17.5.1, there was a fix for an unusual bug related to a database corruption issue. After installing iOS 17.5 and iPadOS 17.5, some users saw long-deleted images reappearing in their Photo Library. Apple later said this was due to a database corruption issue that had caused the photos to reappear even after being deleted.

The Recovered album feature in the latest software updates should prevent something like this from happening again, while also giving users access to photos and videos that are in limbo.

iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia betas are available to developers and public beta testers at this time. The software updates will see a public launch this fall.

Article Link: iOS 18 Adds 'Recovered' Album in Photos to Restore Lost or Damaged Photos and Videos
 
  • Wow
Reactions: gusmula
It’s good to have.. but wouldn’t it be better to not have these issues in the first place..? Or ask the users to resolve whenever there is such occurrences, rather than creating an album?

I somehow feel like this will be very hard for average users to understand what the purpose is. I think Apple should keep it hidden
 
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It’s good to have.. but wouldn’t it be better to not have these issues in the first place..? Or ask the users to resolve whenever there is such occurrences, rather than creating an album?

I somehow feel like this will be very hard for average users to understand what the purpose is
I think it would be confusing for people to be shown random pictures at random times and ask them to make a decision on the spot. At least with this Album they are there in case the person ever wants to look. Yes, preventing problems is better. I’m sure Apple thought about that.
 
I noticed this the other day, I’m really glad they’ve implemented this, if something happens to a photo whether it was meant to be deleted or not I’m glad to have the opportunity to get it back.

Too bad I can’t retrieve the pictures my ex deleted from my phone a couple years back, which then deleted themselves from all my devices since they were synced with icloud 😑
 
Will give this a try. Have some hour long 720p recording from my Kodak hd camera that crashed when finalizing but contains everything but the header info so I kept them hoping to recover them someday. VLC never was able to play them.

Years ago I used graphic converter app to recover broken photos where jpgs are missing some data and that seemed to work.
 
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  • Wow
Reactions: gusmula
At first I thought this was a feature to recover deleted photos that haven’t yet been overwritten by the flash file system 🤔
 
I noticed this the other day, I’m really glad they’ve implemented this, if something happens to a photo whether it was meant to be deleted or not I’m glad to have the opportunity to get it back.

Too bad I can’t retrieve the pictures my ex deleted from my phone a couple years back, which then deleted themselves from all my devices since they were synced with icloud 😑
Deleting someone else’s pictures shouid be a crime 😳

FYI there are services like Amazon Photos and OneDrive that will backup your photos too just in case something like this happens. Those both support Live Photos.
 
Yes. A bunch of peoples old photos started showing up enexpectedly. Might as well make lemonade out of it.
This is the mechanism that resurfaced those photos which had failed to actually be deleted. I don't see any problem. It's a useful feature to help restore photos when the index database gets corrupted. Definitely better than having to rebuild the index to do the same thing.
 
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I just wish Apple would fix Photos more recent (last couple of years) tendency to not load libraries stored on external drives. That one is driving me nuts.
 
I think it would be confusing for people to be shown random pictures at random times and ask them to make a decision on the spot. At least with this Album they are there in case the person ever wants to look. Yes, preventing problems is better. I’m sure Apple thought about that.
Either way, this is too technical for a lot of people. It’s probably better to just delete them in the background.

I never would imagine the privacy prompts (the one asking for location, camera access etc.) to be hard, until I see my grandparents struggling to choose an option
 
Please just let me delete photo albums synced from my Mac!! I can delete music albums and songs, and movies, but NOT photos. Make no sense.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Victor Mortimer
I have a bunch of photos that show up as thumbnails but when I click on them, I get an error that they cannot be found on disc. Photos is set to import all images, so not sure how this happened.
I think I had that issue too. And I had no clue how to fix it
 
Apple tries their best to make users buy iPhones with little memory and instead use iCloud so that their photos and other personal information is stored on their servers where data is more easily accessible than on the device. It’s a weird twist as Apple always markets privacy as a number one feature and always talks about on device security. Security in the cloud however. That is another question. The recovered photos feature comes well in time after the bug that caused other people’s iCloud data to sync to other devices and I think we all have to agree that storing such data in massive centralized servers isn’t always great. Let’s see when that changes.
 
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