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A new feature in iOS 18 shares usersβ photos and photo data with Apple by default, a setting that has raised concerns about privacy.
Called βEnhanced Visual Search,β the feature allows the βdevice to match places in your photos with a global index maintained by Appleβ in order to search photos based on landmarks and other information within photos.
While the setting intends to make the Photos app more efficient and searchable, developer Jeff Johnson raised issues with the privacy of sharing such data with Apple despite the so-called βenrichedβ iPhone experience.
βFrom my own perspective, computing privacy is simple: if something happens entirely on my computer, then itβs private, whereas if my computer sends data to the manufacturer of the computer, then itβs not private, or at least not entirely private,β he wrote in the most recent entry on his blog.
βThus, the only way to guarantee computing privacy is to not send data off the device.β
The choice to toggle βEnhanced Visual Searchβ on, then, βwas made by Apple, silently, without my consent,β he said.
βIt ought to be up to the individual user to decide their own tolerance for the risk of privacy violations,β he argued.
He pointed to the numerous security and privacy flaws that Apple has needed to patch in recent years, which are typically accompanied by urgent update warnings.
βA software bug would be sufficient to make users vulnerable, and Apple canβt guarantee that their software includes no bugs,β Johnson wrote, claiming that the data from the βEnhanced Visual Searchβ feature could potentially be exploited by malicious actors.
According to Appleβs βPhotos & Privacyβ document, the tech giant said that the data used for βEnhanced Visual Searchβ is encrypted and the IP address of users is shielded so that Apple cannot learn from the information in the photos.
To turn off βEnhanced Visual Searchβ on your iPhone, open the Settings app, navigate to Apps, then Photos and scroll to the bottom of the page. On a Mac, open the Photos app then head to Settings, then General to toggle off.
Experts recently urged Apple device users to update to the latest version of iOS 18 despite their fears of AI or otherwise, as a bug in the non-updated software could leave customers vulnerable to malicious actors.
The bug could be exploited by hackers to access usersβ sensitive data without a trace βΒ and the longer people wait to update, the higher the risk.