Navigating Adobe’s discontinued Creative Cloud Synced files
If you were a user of Adobe’s Creative Cloud Synced files (CCSF), by now you are aware that they discontinued that facility starting February 4, 2025 (originally February 1, 2024). In their post about this change, they advise that sync’d files left on CCSF after the date will be deleted and no longer accessible using the Creative Cloud Desktop / Asset manager. See Discontinuation of Creative Cloud Synced files. They kindly renamed the local directory to Creative Cloud Files + <account type> + <profile_name> + <email> + <GUID>, and left any files in that directory intact.
I was an early adopter of the CCSF facility, to support my Lightroom Classic usage. Some of you Classic users apparently stored your catalogue in the directory (based upon my research). I didn’t do that. Instead, I guess I did something unexpected. I put my entire image directory in the CCSF directory. Yep, all 792 GBytes of 72,207 images. It worked fine! As many have pointed out, it was like using OneDrive, DropBox or Box. I did have to upgrade to a 1 TB storage plan, which I did in 2023. I remember being able to access those images using the Creative Cloud Desktop -> Files -> Photos (or Assets, don’t remember exactly). I had to in order to permanently delete “deleted” images so they wouldn’t count towards my storage usage.
Okay, so what’s the problem? My reported cloud storage usage. If Adobe deleted those images in the cloud, as they suggested they would, that hasn’t been reflected in my reported storage usage. I showed ~837 GB of 1 TB used BEFORE the February 4 deadline, and ~837 GB of 1 TB AFTER the February 4 deadline. Over the last two years I’ve started experimenting with Lightroom Web / Mobile / Desktop, and have 11,710 photos “in the cloud”. Given those photos are my only usage of cloud storage now, that would suggest that each image from my phone is, on average, 71 GBytes in size. For those of you familiar with iphone photos, that’s laughable. As I have all Lightroom Web / Mobile / Desktop images sync’d to Classic, I confirmed that all 11,710 images in the sync folder take up only ~50 GBytes on my local drive (yes, I download full-size images). Something fishy here – we’re talking orders of magnitude differences.
Does Adobe know? We’ll I’ve tried explaining the issue to their support team on four occasions. I can’t get past “I stored my photos on the CCSF facility”. They insist the ONLY way to get Classic images to sync to the cloud is by creating a collection and sharing it. While that might be true now, it certainly wasn’t in the past. They are unable to grasp that I used an Adobe CCSF facility to store images. I tried a different tactic – asking them to explain my cloud usage by application, hoping to expose the issue. Nope, can’t share that . . . that’s too granular a level of detail. When I ask to have my call escalated to someone familiar with the CCSF sync facility, they hung up on me. When I try to explain my calculation of 71 GBytes per cloud image calculation, they say it all depends upon what the file contains. When I try to explain basic image size fundamentals, again support hung up on me. It seems Adobe has provided limited training on this recent change to sync files.
So, here I am paying for a 1 TB plan to store images that should have been removed, but appear to have stayed put. I can’t get anyone in Adobe to appreciate the issue or investigate. Anyone else having problems reconciling their before and after storage usage after the CCSF sync change?
