2. iCloud cloud service automatically stores it in the cloud, meaning it gets pushed to the server.
So, when you take a picture with your iPhone 4s, it will store it via iCloud and simultaneously push it to your other devices. On your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch, there are all sorts of important information stored. When the device is powered on, iCloud automatically backs them up through the WLAN network every day. Once connected to power, everything can be backed up quickly and efficiently. You just need to connect your device to the WLAN network and enter your Apple ID and password.
After much effort, the reporter managed to contact the owner through Weibo, Douban, and Renren Network among other channels. The owner, Xiao Chen, is a post-90s girl from Nanjing Foreign Language School, born in 1994.
In her Renren Network status update on the 4th, Xiao Chen stated, "I deleted that album, after seeing many people's comments, I realized I also did something wrong. I shouldn't have put those photos online. I don't want the phone back, I've given it to her. Thank you all." The next day, she requested that all shared photos and photos with statuses be deleted. "There were 170 people adding me as a friend and leaving messages in one day. I'm busy preparing for my final exams. Please stop sharing and uploading. I'm very grateful." Xiao Chen hopes everyone deletes the content and expressed in the interview that she doesn't wish to bring up the matter again. Since she is about to take her final exams, she doesn't want this incident to affect her mood.
But some netizens pointed out that by posting the photos online without permission, the owner may have violated the right to portrait of others. A netizen named Xingqiu said that someone who has lost something would not find it very excessive. It is possible to find the owner of the phone; the person most frequently contacted in the contacts list is at least a friend. A simple call could inform the finder.
Xie Chunsen, sales manager of Nanjing Jianlin Technology Company, told reporters that if you want to achieve synchronization functionality, three conditions need to be met: first, the phone must have cloud services and networking capabilities; second, you need to set up the phone in advance; third, ensure the phone remains connected to the internet.
Yesterday, a Weibo post regarding a lost iPhone 4s went viral online. Originally, the lost iPhone 4s had iCloud functionality. A girl found the phone, instead of returning it, she enthusiastically took selfies. Unbeknownst to her, the phone's iCloud service automatically synchronized the photos to the photo stream in the cloud and then synchronized them back to the owner. As a result, the owner discovered the "finder's" selfies taken with the iPhone 4s. Outraged, the owner uploaded the selfie photos to Renren Network at 21:29 on the 4th. By close to 11 PM, there were already 21 comments. Unexpectedly, by morning on the 5th, it had stirred up numerous netizens, spreading widely on Renren Network and Weibo.
Yesterday, Weibo posts about this event were also going viral, with very concise content: "Location, Nanjing. A girl lost an iPhone 4S during the New Year holiday, which was picked up by another girl who kept it and took selfies. Unbeknownst to her, the phone was running on iOS 5.0.1 system, thus syncing the photos back to the owner through iCloud... The owner then uploaded her photos online. Status: It has become popular on Renren Network."
Xiao Chen's recent Renren Network statuses show that she has already deleted the finder's photos and asked all friends who shared her status to delete them as well. The reporter contacted Xiao Chen through Renren Network's online chat tool. She told the reporter that she lost her phone during the New Year holiday and had even reported it to the police station near Xinjiekou. Because the phone contained very important things, she was momentarily at a loss. Later, she saw the finder taking selfies, and the photo stream was seen via iCloud service. Out of anger, she posted it online.
This reporter: Li Chong, Qiao Jinling
However, some other netizens said that even though the right to portrait was infringed upon, the finder herself was at fault and might not dare to sue the owner. Some netizens discussed whether the finder might have already returned the phone to the owner.
Many netizens praised the cloud service function of the iPhone 4s. Netizens said that despite being computer illiterate, Apple is truly a great product. In front of high technology, let those who keep found items tremble. They began exchanging how to set up such functions.
3. The server will automatically send the photos to any of your Apple devices.
Upon seeing the finder's photos, netizens reacted differently.
The owner is a post-90s girl from Nanjing.
So, how does the iPhone 4s achieve this function? This mainly owes to the cloud service function iCloud provided by Apple.
She said: due to a momentary impulse, she posted the finder's photos online, but later deleted them all.
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Xiao Chen told the reporter that both the finder and herself were at fault. When asked why she thought she was at fault, she stopped speaking. Observing Xiao Chen's internal network, she agreed with her friend's view of "not acting impulsively and committing illegal acts," feeling that it harmed the girl in the photo, but lacked consideration when uploading. Subsequently, she deleted the album. Xiao Chen said that she is currently busy preparing for her final exams and will temporarily not pursue this matter. Lost is lost, considering it as accumulating good karma for her exams.
Experts say that achieving this function requires three steps.
Netizens said: In front of high technology, let those who keep found items tremble.
Jiangsu Lanhai Law Firm lawyer Zhou Youquan told reporters that Xiao Chen's act of uploading the "finder girl's" photos goes against civil law and infringes upon the "finder girl's" personal privacy.
How did the finder's selfies get transmitted back to the owner?
Netizens praise the cloud service function of the iPhone 4s.
It is understood that under the iCloud service, any device's photos can automatically synchronize to the cloud. iCloud saves the last 30 days' worth of photos, iOS devices save the latest 1000 photos, while Macs and PCs save all photos. This feature also supports Apple TV.
The photo stream of the iPhone 4s is more targeted in image sharing. Through this service, all photos taken by the iPhone will automatically be pushed to the server, and then the server will push these contents to each Apple device previously logged in with a personal ID or computers with macOS or Windows systems installed.