THRD, calls it the Collective Consciousness. All occurrences, past and future are 'in' there. There is, well, I see it as a 'ring', circular in appearance that has everything that we sense present. The sense of Time is a phenomenon of higher life forms. I have no problem with recovering past speech, past happenings, and past endeavors. If the program claims to work on iOS13 for data/message/whatsapp or any other program recovery, they are point blank lying. So backing up the phone wipes any remaining deleted data in order to create the backup, before it backs it up! In any case, the mere process of even running the backup will destroy any data that somehow is left in the phone, because when you plug the phone in and begin the backup process, the first thing that happens is the SQLite tables will merge, forcing it to essentially create a brand new database, which will not include the deleted sections of the pre-merged tables. The fact is, no matter what software you use and what it claims it can do, IT CAN'T.Īdmittedly, some of these products have various degrees of success with early iOS versions, but basically every iPhone in use in the world as of right now will have auto updated its iOS version to at least iOS 12 already now (Which may recover an EXTREMELY limited amount of data, so little that anything you do get is probably useless) and it's likely that these have all since auto updated to the latest iOS 13 by now anyway, which will give ZERO deleted data recovery.Īs already said, the phone cleans up the database mere seconds after the user deleting a message and the entry no longer exists. Many of them are actually just the same generic clone software of Dr Phone etc, just with the name/logo and other minor user interface graphics changed to appear different. Its not just Fonelab though, its EVERY one of these "iPhone Recovery" products. The only way around this is a live reporting spy app that captures the data in real time, but that's a moral hurdle (and legal one) that really needs some serious consideration to justify crossing. The phone hard deletes (for general intent and purpose here) the content before you could possibly get a chance to recover it from the phone. Gone for good, irretrievable.Ĭurrent model iPhones certainly run this version and I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but this means that if you have been relying on this software for answers these days, you are very likely blissfully unaware of deleted content now. If a text or call or other item is deleted immediately after its sent or the conversation finished, its likely wiped from the phone within seconds to minutes. New iOS versions clean this database system up in their backend processes almost instantaneously. Like I said above, I have done it with an IPhone 5 for example many times over the years and whilst a real world heavily used phone gave a more limited return (but still did return), the test phone that I use for nothing but testing and therefore has had limited data and daily use is able to recover everything in perfectly clear "as advertised" format. So these programs were previously able to pull the sql databases and translate the data marked as deleted back into a viewable format. Days, weeks, months, even years of "deleted" data might be available depending on the OS version and the phones available disk space and regularity of use. Early versions generally had plenty of available space for data, so most of the time the "deleted" data would remain available for recovery for sometimes years, or until the scheduled database refresh and reallocation had occurred. Basically what this meant was, data that was deleted (messages, photos, call logs etc etc) by a user would be marked on the data base as deleted (or more correctly, marked as no longer relevant or active data and the space available for new data if required, or to be properly cleaned when the schedule occurred in its own time). iPhone backup extractor etc) is that the phone technology and software has essentially closed the exploit that these programs were previously able to use to some success.Įarly IOS versions had a significant delay in their database refresh and clean up schedules. So the issue with fonelab and indeed pretty much EVERY publicly available iPhone recovery software now (inc. A little further info for those who come across this thread by search or suggestion.
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