
Although you have backed up them with iTunes/iCloud, you can’t check call history on iPhone directly. Just its status is changed from “Allocated” to “UNallocated”. When you deleted some data (such as call history) on your iPhone, they still exist in the SQLite database. Let me explain why and introduce effective methods to recover deleted call history on iPhone. However, whether you have backed up to iTunes and iCloud or not, the call logs are still unreadable unless you restore the whole backup file. In fact, we often ignore iPhone call history, and sometimes we even directly clear all call logs that contain unsaved but important phone numbers/contacts. Is there any way to check and retrieve deleted call history on iPhone X/8/7/6/5 Plus/SE?" “I cleared up my iPhone call logs and now need to go back through it, but I’m not sure how can I see the deleted call history. But I mistakenly deleted some important call logs that I haven’t saved the phone numbers to Contact. Even if it's possible it will help me out a lot.“How do I recover deleted call history from iPhone? I don't know why I recently received a junk/spam phone calls from unknown resources. I would greatly appreciate any instructions on how to achieve this, or at least recommending an app or maybe if a professional data recovery business is capable of doing this. I want to make sure I can find what I need before spending a lot of money on the app. Several apps only retrieve what's showing in recents. I've tried 6 different Windows apps (trial versions) to retrieve them and the best one can only find 364 calls. I want to tap into this file and get them all in one place without having to do this. Apparently deleting the calls one by one, you can see previous calls beyond what the recents can show. The "recents" section only shows the last 100 calls. I've read unofficially, the iPhone stores up to or over 1000 calls, or maybe the whole history in its system files somewhere. I'm trying to get all the call history from my iPhone onto my Windows PC. Irrelvant submissions will be pruned in an effort towards tidiness.

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Topics include digital forensics, incident response, malware analysis, and more. This subreddit is not limited to just the computers and encompasses all media that may also fall under digital forensics (e.g., cellphones, video, etc.). The field is the application of several information security principles and aims to provide for attribution and event reconstruction following forth from audit processes. A community dedicated towards the branch of forensic science encompassing the recovery and investigation of material found in digital devices, often in relation to computer crime.
