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In iOS 17 and macOS Sonoma, turning off iCloud Drive no longer impacts third-party apps that use Apple's iCloud database to sync their data, a notable change that is likely to be welcomed by both developers and users.

icloud-drive.jpg

In previous versions of macOS and iOS, when iCloud Drive is manually disabled in System Settings or the Settings app, this also turns off iCloud (i.e. CloudKit) database access for third-party apps, even if they don't use an iCloud Drive folder. This is despite the fact that iCloud syncing of Apple's own stock apps remains unaffected.

This behavior is not made clear in Apple's user-facing settings, which confusingly include separate switches to turn iCloud on and off individually for iCloud Drive, system apps, and third-party apps.

Moreover, iCloud Drive can take a considerable amount of device storage, therefore some users may choose to disable it, without realizing that they are also preventing some third-party apps from syncing between their devices.


By making iCloud Drive and third-party app iCloud access configuration independent from one another in iOS 17 and macOS Sonoma, cloud management better reflects the Settings interface. It also means that users with company-issued devices where iCloud Drive is disabled as a matter of policy will still be able to use third-party apps that depend on iCloud syncing to function properly.


Article Link: PSA: Disabling iCloud Drive in iOS 17 No Longer Turns Off Third-Party App CloudKit Syncing
 
I'm surprise this is even optional with iOS 17 that it can be turned off.
I have some friends that don't use 2FA, one of these updates is going to make it mandatory. :rolleyes:
 
So, for clarity, 3rd-party apps have access to cloud storage ... for free? Or is CloudKit just a conduit for syncing between devices, with no storage space being consumed?
 
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So, for clarity, 3rd-party apps have access to cloud storage ... for free? Or is CloudKit just a conduit for syncing between devices, with no storage space being consumed?
I think a pop up based on consumption will show up otherwise I see incoming workarounds for using iCloud for free beyond 5GB
 
Never this was like this. I have many 3rd party apps that hook into my 2TB iCloud plan. My money for my plan, Apple shouldn’t get to decide who uses it other than me.

However, if this has to do with security (more is better than less) I can understand; glad they took the time to rewrite the code 👍👍
 
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