iPhone Info

from Jim H

Here's some info about your iPhone I bet you didn't know. Tech blogger Kim Komando explains  below in her blog. First thing that came to my mind after reading this -- 'sneaky devil'!...☺️...Jim

 The 30-day lie

When you delete a photo, it doesn’t disappear. It moves to a holding area and sits there for 30 days. Check yours right now:

  • iPhone: Open Photos > Collections > scroll down to Recently Deleted. There’s everything you thought you erased last month. 

  • Android: Open Photos or Gallery > tap Library or Menu > Trash or Bin. Same deal.

The fix: After deleting photos, empty the trash immediately.

  • iPhone: Recently Deleted > Select > tap the three dot icon > Delete All

  • Android: Trash > tap the three dots > Empty trash > Delete permanently.

💾 Ghost data

Even after you empty Recently Deleted, the photo isn’t gone. Your phone marks that storage space as available and hides the image from view. The actual data sits there, fully intact, until new photos or apps eventually overwrite it. That could take days, weeks or months.

This is why forensic investigators can recover deleted texts and pictures from phones years later. They use special tools to scan unmarked storage and pull back everything. That photo you deleted in 2019? Still there.

☁️ Cloud backup trap

Deleting an image from your phone doesn’t delete it from iCloud or Google Photos. They’re separate. You have to delete it twice.

  • iPhone: Delete the photo, empty Recently Deleted, then open iCloud.com, go to Photos > Collections > Recently Deleted, and delete it again.

  • Android: Delete from your gallery, then open Google Photos, go to Collections > Trash, and empty it.

Skip this step, and your deleted photo lives forever in the cloud.

🧨 Before you sell your phone

A factory reset doesn’t guarantee deletion. Studies show up to 40% of wiped phones still contain recoverable data. Here’s what you need to do.

  • iPhone: Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone > Erase All Content and Settings. Let it finish. Then set it up as new and erase it AGAIN. Yes, twice.

  • Android: Factory reset, fill the storage with junk files like big videos, then factory reset again. This overwrites the ghost data.

If your old phone has truly sensitive content, don’t sell it. Physically destroy it. Some things aren’t worth the $200 resale value.

Your data is your business. Make sure it actually disappears when you want it to.

📤 Know someone with an old phone lying around? Forward this before their private photos end up on Reddit. Or use the share icons below to email them a copy or post to your social media.