I believe iCloud doesn't work with non-Apple mobile devices, so iCloud
can create a sort of captive tablet and phone market.
If they grab files
without being asked, you could soon be paying Apple storage fees. Apple claims the rights to what they upload from you, and they scan. It
doesn't have client-side encryption, so security is in doubt.
I'm convinced that in 2018 and 2021, Apple removed my passwords without asking and that they became Apple's property. Maybe the fine print of
the user agreement covers it, but it seems like theft to me.
Further, my experience with Apple Support has led me to believe that declining to use iCloud has been behind my plague of sleep problems
since 2017. That's another story.
I want to know how to recover my photos and rid all my devices of any
iCloud problems.
I believe iCloud doesn't work with non-Apple mobile devices
If they grab files without being asked,
Apple
claims the rights to what they upload from you
I'm convinced that in 2018 and 2021, Apple removed my passwords without asking
Further, my experience with Apple Support has led me to believe that declining to use iCloud has been behind my plague of sleep problems
since 2017. That's another story.
Apple
claims the rights to what they upload from you
Nonsense.
Further, my experience with Apple Support has led me to believe that declining to use iCloud has been behind my plague of sleep problems
since 2017. That's another story.
It's an idiotic "fake moon landing" level story.
No one is required to
use iCloud and it has nothing to do with device sleep.
In message <smuc99$7hn$1@dont-email.me> J Burns <burns@nospam.com> wrote:
I believe iCloud doesn't work with non-Apple mobile devices
If they grab files without being asked,
What nonsense is this? iCloud Drive si opt in and only stores the files
you tell it to store.
Apple
claims the rights to what they upload from you
Nonsense.
I'm convinced that in 2018 and 2021, Apple removed my passwords without
asking
No they didn't.
What nonsense is this? iCloud Drive si opt in and only stores the files
you tell it to store.
Fact: They say they have 226 of my photos amounting to 296 MB.
Fact: I never asked to use iCloud.
Fact: They say they have 1.2KB if mine,
and I can free up space by
deleting Apple Book's iCloud Drive folder in Finder. Never having seen
any such folder, I asked Spotlight. It came up with a Terms and
Conditions letter from December, 2019.
I remember. I'd just bought an iPad. It told me I should back up to
iCloud, and I said OK.
The iPhone scandal showed that Apple doesn't treat all customers the
same. Owners of older phones were targeted. Their phones were slowed to induce them to buy new phones or new batteries.
In article <sn21c3$j4a$1@dont-email.me>, J Burns <burns@nospam.com>
wrote:
What nonsense is this? iCloud Drive si opt in and only stores the files
you tell it to store.
Fact: They say they have 226 of my photos amounting to 296 MB.
Fact: I never asked to use iCloud.
yes you did.
Fact: They say they have 1.2KB if mine,
1.2 kb is almost nothing.
On 11/15/21 10:08 PM, Lewis wrote:
In message<smuc99$7hn$1@dont-email.me> J Burns<burns@nospam.com> wrote:
I believe iCloud doesn't work with non-Apple mobile devices
If they grab files without being asked,
What nonsense is this? iCloud Drive si opt in and only stores the files
you tell it to store.
Fact: They say they have 226 of my photos amounting to 296 MB.
Fact: I never asked to use iCloud.
Fact: They say they have 1.2KB if mine, and I can free up space by
deleting Apple Book's iCloud Drive folder in Finder. Never having seen
any such folder, I asked Spotlight. It came up with a Terms and
Conditions letter from December, 2019.
I remember. I'd just bought an iPad. It told me I should back up to
iCloud, and I said OK.
There's never been much of anything on it because
I never found much use for it beyond of course inspecting my car's
muffler by inserting a camera a couple of feet up the tailpipe.
I'd never seen this message or any of the 16 others in the Apple
mailbox. Thanks to Apple's system upgrades, I have approximately 67 mailboxes.
I check my inbox for new messages. These must have come
directly to the Apple mailbox, which I didn't know existed. If they'd
been marked unread, I might have noticed them.
The first in this box was in November, 2012, a year after Steve Jobs
died. It asked to verify my new Apple ID and went unanswered. I
remember. I'd had nothing but Macs for 26 years, and now I needed a new
ID to set up my new Mini. Four minutes later, a message welcomed me to iCloud. If I'd seen it, I would have taken notice because I didn't want
it and knew nothing about it.
They don't claim my 2018 was ever enrolled. The message welcoming my
2020 to iCloud was dated minutes after I first plugged it in. I didn't
the message until the next day, and I was puzzled. When they demand your Apple ID to set up a computer, apparently they count it as a request for iCloud.
Find My Mac is among the services they say I signed up for. I remember
they asked if I wanted it and I said no.
Except for backups or an iPad that I've hardly ever opened, I didn't
know I had any tie to iCloud. I certainly didn't ask to upload 226 pictures.
Apple
claims the rights to what they upload from you
Nonsense.
Wikipedia should be thoroughly ashamed of spreading that lie to gullible readers like me. You should give them a piece of your mind.
I'm convinced that in 2018 and 2021, Apple removed my passwords without asking
No they didn't.
Fact: I migrated to my 2020 from a backup of my 2018.
Fact: I erased the backup disk and backed up my 2020 on it.
Fact: I erased the 2018 and migrated from the 2020 backup.
Fact: A few hours later, the 2020 had no passwords.
Fact: The 2018 has them, and they must have come from the 2020.
They were on the 2020, and they disappeared, and Apple claims I signed
the 2020 up for iCloud.
Apple's Krissie told me to run a computer in Safe Mode for several days.
It took only seconds. In normal running, I'd merely had trouble putting
it to sleep. In Safe Mode, I was immediately hit with a demand saying
iCloud needed my Apple ID. If I clicked "later," I'd immediately be hit
with a similar demand from Face Time. Clicking "later" would bring
another iCloud demand, and vice versa. The option was to agree, then hit "cancel" when the form came up for my Apple ID. Hitting "cancel" would
bring another demand for my Apple ID.
Following Krissie's advice brought me up against Apple malware, much
like those web pages where it seems you can't escape without installing
the software they demand.
In Safe Mode, that malware must have come from Apple. It looks as if the years of sleep problem were to drive me to Krissie so she could guide me
to the malware, and I might provide my ID, which could be used as
permission to upload my files. Missing passwords could also have driven
me to Support, where I'd be told I'd inadvertently uploaded my passowrds
The iPhone scandal showed that Apple doesn't treat all customers the
same. Owners of older phones were targeted. Their phones were slowed to induce them to buy new phones or new batteries.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 482 |
Nodes: | 16 (0 / 16) |
Uptime: | 73:06:32 |
Calls: | 9,571 |
Calls today: | 2 |
Files: | 13,666 |
Messages: | 6,142,366 |