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Let’s take a look at a few ways to backup your iPhone photos to your Mac. If your iPhone were to be stolen or suffer an unfortunate accident would you lose all your precious photos? Those using iCloud Photos may think that all those are backed up securely in iCloud. iCloud Photos does indeed store a copy of all your photos, but you shouldn’t assume that everything in it is completely protected. Although it’s extremely unlikely that Apple’s systems would fail so that you’d lose anything, the contents of your iCloud account aren’t as safe as would be ideal.

An Aside to Explain Why iCloud Isn’t Perfectly Secure

Recently, Wall Street Journal reporters Joanna Stern and Nicole Nguyen covered a troubling form of crime aimed at iPhone users in an article (paywalled) and accompanying video. Thieves hang out in bars looking for users who tap in their passcodes instead of using Face ID or Touch ID. Once they’ve learned someone’s passcode with surreptitious shoulder surfing, they grab the iPhone and run. They can use the passcode to change the user’s Apple ID password and enable or reset a recovery key. This prevents the user from employing Find My to locate and lock the iPhone. With the passcode, they can make purchases with ApplePay, access passwords in iCloud Keychain, and use it to facilitate identity theft. It’s a disaster.

But it gets worse, as the reporters detail in a new Wall Street Journal article (paywalled) and video. By enabling a recovery key, the thief disables Apple’s normal account recovery process for resetting the Apple ID password. Along with all the financial losses and headaches, you might lose access to your iCloud account and with it, all your photos in iCloud. With luck, Apple will block this attack soon.

For now, follow this commonsense advice to reduce the chances of being victimized:

  • Pay attention to your iPhone’s physical security in public.
  • Always use Face ID or Touch ID in public.
  • If you must enter your passcode in public, conceal it from anyone nearby.
  • Never share your passcode beyond highly trusted family members.

Backing Up Your iPhone Photos to a Mac

As with so many other modern ills, good backups go a long way toward minimizing the pain of problems. They won’t prevent someone from stealing your iPhone or locking you out of your account, but if that were to happen, at least you won’t lose all your photos!

There are two possible backup scenarios. Using iCloud Photos and downloading originals to your Mac is easiest but requires that you pay Apple for more storage if you have more than a handful of photos. If you don’t use iCloud Photos, you can just back up your iPhone to your Mac. Better yet, import images into Photos on the Mac and then sync them back. It’s more work and fussier, but doesn’t cost anything.

iCloud

  • iCloud Photos: When using iCloud Photos, the trick to protecting your pictures is to sync the originals with your Mac. In Photos > Settings/Preferences > iCloud, select Download Originals to this Mac. The only downside of this approach is that you need enough disk space on your Mac to hold them all. If that’s not the case, you may need to move your system Photos Library to an external hard drive or consider replacing your computer with one that has more storage.

Without iCloud

  • iPhone-only photos: If you aren’t using iCloud Photos, the best approach is to connect your iPhone to your Mac using a USB-to-Lightning cable or Wi-Fi. Then import new snapshots into Photos on your Mac manually (select the iPhone in the Photos sidebar).

    Then you can sync all the photos back to your iPhone using the Finder. First, select the iPhone in a Finder window’s sidebar. Then click Photos in the button bar at the top, and select “Sync photos to your device from Photos” along with “All photos and albums” and “Include videos” in the options below. Finally, click Apply or Sync.

    Backing up your iPhone to your Mac without syncing to Photos also backs up your photos. But the only way to get them back is to restore a backup onto an iPhone. It’s much better to have all the photos accessible in Photos too.

Once you backup iPhone photos to your Mac, you should back up all your data. We recommend Time Machine or an Internet service like Backblaze. If you’re concerned about the quality of your backups for preserving photos, make an appointment for help.

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