• =?UTF-8?Q?Re=3A_Man_plans_to_sue_Apple_after_=E2=80=98deleted?= =?UTF-8

    From News@21:1/5 to badgolferman on Fri Jun 14 17:46:02 2024
    On 6/14/2024 5:43 PM, badgolferman wrote:
    A man is preparing to sue Apple for more than £5 million after ‘deleted messages’ he sent to sex workers were discovered by his wife.

    The unfaithful husband claims that Apple’s lack of transparency over deleted messages has led to his wife filing for divorce.

    Richard, not his real name, is reportedly a middle aged man from England,
    and revealed to The Times that he had turned to sex workers in the final years of his marriage. He would contact them via the iMessages app on his iPhone before deleting the incriminating texts.

    However, when his wife went on the family iMac, the messages, going back several years, popped up despite him believing he had deleted them.

    She filed for divorce within a month.

    He told The Times: ‘If you are told a message is deleted, you are entitled to believe it’s deleted.

    https://metro.co.uk/2024/06/14/man-plans-sue-apple-deleted-messages-reveal-cheated-21035147/

    What a dick.

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  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@21:1/5 to badgolferman on Sat Jun 15 05:58:32 2024
    On 14.06.24 23:43, badgolferman wrote:
    A man is preparing to sue Apple for more than £5 million after ‘deleted messages’ he sent to sex workers were discovered by his wife.

    The unfaithful husband claims that Apple’s lack of transparency over deleted messages has led to his wife filing for divorce.

    Richard, not his real name, is reportedly a middle aged man from England,
    and revealed to The Times that he had turned to sex workers in the final years of his marriage. He would contact them via the iMessages app on his iPhone before deleting the incriminating texts.

    However, when his wife went on the family iMac, the messages, going back several years, popped up despite him believing he had deleted them.

    She filed for divorce within a month.

    He told The Times: ‘If you are told a message is deleted, you are entitled to believe it’s deleted.

    https://metro.co.uk/2024/06/14/man-plans-sue-apple-deleted-messages-reveal-cheated-21035147/

    This case - should it really exist - is a social issue and not a
    technical one.

    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@21:1/5 to Your Name on Sat Jun 15 06:00:33 2024
    On 15.06.24 04:11, Your Name wrote:
    On 2024-06-14 22:42:48 +0000, Tyrone said:
    On Jun 14, 2024 at 5:52:27 PM EDT, "Jolly Roger" <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 2024-06-14, badgolferman <[email protected]> wrote:
    A man is preparing to sue Apple for more than £5 million after
    ‘deleted messages’ he sent to sex workers were discovered by his wife. >>>>
    The unfaithful husband claims that Apple’s lack of transparency over >>>> deleted messages has led to his wife filing for divorce.

    Richard, not his real name, is reportedly a middle aged man from
    England, and revealed to The Times that he had turned to sex workers
    in the final years of his marriage. He would contact them via the
    iMessages app on his iPhone before deleting the incriminating texts.

    However, when his wife went on the family iMac, the messages, going
    back several years, popped up despite him believing he had deleted
    them.

    She filed for divorce within a month.

    He told The Times: ‘If you are told a message is deleted, you are
    entitled to believe it’s deleted.

    The guy didn't have Messages in iCloud enabled, so when he deleted them
    from one device they remained on the other devices signed into the same
    iCloud account. Expecting them to be deleted from his other devices
    despite not having Messages in iCloud enabled is irrational. His
    "problem" is the result of user error. So, like so many others, this
    frivolous lawsuit will go nowhere. 😉

    The whole idea that "Apple caused my divorce" is absurd. Agreed, this case >> will go nowhere.

    There's a similar stupidity here in New Zealand. There are lots of
    people complaining that the banks do not do enough to "protect" people
    from scams because a few morons have lost lots of their money by
    transferring it to scammers.

    It's not up to the banks to police what you do with your own money!
    What happened to taking responsibility for your own actions?? Using
    some common sense?? These complaining fools want a nanny state to
    protect them from everything, and then they'll complain about being
    "spied" on and about needing to pay increased fees.

    What next? Do they expect the bank to tell them what fast food meals
    they can and cannot buy to eat?? What shirts they can and cannot buy??
    And then expect a bank refund when what they don't like whatever they
    chose themselves to purchase??

    The human race is becoming more and more stupid. :-\

    Wait until AI really takes over!


    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jun 15 17:28:48 2024
    Am 14.06.24 um 23:52 schrieb Jolly Roger:
    On 2024-06-14, badgolferman <[email protected]> wrote:
    A man is preparing to sue Apple for more than £5 million after
    ‘deleted messages’ he sent to sex workers were discovered by his wife. >>
    The unfaithful husband claims that Apple’s lack of transparency over
    deleted messages has led to his wife filing for divorce.

    Richard, not his real name, is reportedly a middle aged man from
    England, and revealed to The Times that he had turned to sex workers
    in the final years of his marriage. He would contact them via the
    iMessages app on his iPhone before deleting the incriminating texts.

    However, when his wife went on the family iMac, the messages, going
    back several years, popped up despite him believing he had deleted
    them.

    She filed for divorce within a month.

    He told The Times: ‘If you are told a message is deleted, you are
    entitled to believe it’s deleted.

    The guy didn't have Messages in iCloud enabled, so when he deleted them
    from one device they remained on the other devices signed into the same iCloud account. Expecting them to be deleted from his other devices
    despite not having Messages in iCloud enabled is irrational. His
    "problem" is the result of user error. So, like so many others, this frivolous lawsuit will go nowhere. 😉

    *ROTFLSTC*

    --
    "Gutta cavat lapidem." (Ovid)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)