| ▲ | wlesieutre 3 hours ago | |||||||
When you use iOS's "limited access" permissions to give an app access to some of your photos but not the whole library, the photo picker UI does a pretty good job of letting you easily do three things: 1) Grant access to a photo 2) Identify which photos you've granted access to 3) Revoke previously granted access macOS's concession to give access to whole folders at a time is necessary for real software to work, but they haven't done a good job of items 2 and 3. | ||||||||
| ▲ | jbverschoor 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Sure. But the proper api call to make is selecting a picture. Not access to the photo library. That is an api design flaw, and simply a bad / obsolete implementation by the app developer. The complaint of the OP is that he can still open a file which is in the downloads folder. But that’s not what the user is doing. There’s no reason to give folder access at all. (Except for file sorting apps etc). The only “reason” would be that it’s more difficult for developers to atomically overwrite a file in the same locations. And quite frankly, they should (and perhaps already do) have api calls for exactly that. I think this is why many apps request access sometimes. | ||||||||
| ||||||||