Just to clarify some of the confusion around this, it is the
folders which have symbolic links, not the individual
files.
This has the side effect of making it appear as though there are two places a given "duplicated" file exists but that's not the case. It's actually only in one folder, but there are two different names (basically aliases) for that folder.
Here's the view from the command line:
Code:
$ ls -l /accounts/1000/shared/misc/android/
drwxrws--- 2 android_root 1000_shared 4096 Feb 21 06:36 Alarms
drwxrws--- 3 101481000 1000_shared 4096 Feb 21 07:20 Android
drwxrwsrwx 2 android_root 1000_shared 4096 Feb 21 06:36 DCIM
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root nto 31 Apr 05 12:54 Download -> /accounts/1000/shared/downloads
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root nto 28 Apr 05 12:54 Movies -> /accounts/1000/shared/videos
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root nto 27 Apr 05 12:54 Music -> /accounts/1000/shared/music
drwxrws--- 2 android_root 1000_shared 4096 Feb 21 06:36 Notifications
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root nto 28 Apr 05 12:54 Pictures -> /accounts/1000/shared/photos
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root nto 27 Apr 05 12:54 Podcasts -> /accounts/1000/shared/voice
drwxrws--- 2 android_root 1000_shared 4096 Feb 21 06:36 Ringtones
Each of the ones with the letter "l" at the start is a symbolic link, with the part after the "->" showing the real folder to which it points. There's also one at DCIM/Camera pointing to the shared/camera folder, and maybe one or two others at lower levels.