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AppleiPhoneMobileTech

iPhone 17 may be the last iPhone with Apple’s Camera Control button

A new leak suggests the iPhone 17 could be the final iPhone to feature Apple’s Camera Control button as suppliers reportedly stop receiving orders.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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- Editor-in-Chief
Aug 20, 2025, 10:08 AM EDT
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Camera Control on iPhone 16 Pro
Image: Apple
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A new Weibo rumor says Apple may stop buying the hardware that makes the Camera Control button possible, which would mean the iPhone 17 family could be the last generation to ship with the new camera rocker. If you’re already bracing for empty-handed iPhones or planning a memorial for a button you barely used, pump the brakes: the claim is thin on sourcing and thick with guesswork.

The story started on a Chinese social network post from an account that’s best described as prolific but not proven — a copy-and-paste aggregator of other people’s leaks rather than a whistleblower with a track record. The post claims Apple told suppliers it’s not reordering the Camera Control part because “not enough users” engage with it and Apple wants to save money. That’s the entire case as published so far — no supplier documents, no corroborating industry chatter, and no named sources.

Apple introduced the Camera Control button on the iPhone 16 lineup. It’s a flush-mounted, sapphire-topped hardware control with capacitive and pressure-sensing capabilities that can do everything from opening the Camera app and snapping photos to locking exposure, starting video, and surfacing quick camera options — all without touching the screen. In short, it’s a hybrid physical/software control that was clearly aimed at making the camera feel more tactile and pro-friendly.

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Since launch, the button has been polarizing. Some reviewers and creators praised it for letting you zoom, act as a shutter, or lock exposure without wrestling with on-screen controls; others treated it as a niche convenience they never reached for. The Action Button experiment on previous iPhones — where Apple replaced the long-lived mute switch with a multi-function button — showed how even small ergonomic changes can prompt political-level debates in comment threads. In short, a portion of users embrace physical camera controls; a portion shrugs and keeps tapping the screen like they always have.

There are two plausible reasons Apple could drop a feature: usage and cost. Apple watches ‌how people interact with devices at scale and can quietly phase out components that don’t move the needle. On the other hand, hardware changes are expensive to design, test, and qualify across suppliers — and Apple tends to be cautious about removing a popular, visible feature that could upset fans and reviewers.

But the current rumor doesn’t show the usual signs of a supply-chain decision — there are no leaked purchase orders, manufacturing timelines, or corroborating whispers from multiple suppliers. When Apple really intends to cut a component, those details tend to leak first. For now, the balance of evidence leans toward this being early-stage noise rather than a boardroom déjà vu.

Apple makes small design choices that ripple far beyond a single button — the Action Button’s controversy showed that — but it also has a long history of iterating slowly and listening to usage signals. Whether Camera Control is refined, reimagined, or quietly phased out will come down to numbers and product priorities, not a single anonymous Weibo post. For now, enjoy the button if you have it; don’t fret a funeral for it just yet.


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