Samsung Galaxy Phones Will Soon Get a Feature to Prevent Screen Peeking in Public
Samsung has confirmed that it will soon unveil a new layer of privacy protection for Galaxy smartphones, aimed at stopping people nearby from peeking at your screen in crowded places. The feature helps users in public places like metros and buses quietly read messages or type passwords without worrying about unwanted eyes.
The company says this tool adds another visible shield to Galaxy’s existing protection stack. It will give users a more direct sense of control over everyday privacy while using their phones.

Samsung Galaxy privacy layer controls and customisation
The upcoming Samsung Galaxy privacy layer is designed for flexible use, recognising that not every situation demands the same protection. Users can decide which apps should trigger stronger on-screen privacy, or apply stricter controls only when entering login details or accessing sensitive sections of the device.
Settings in the Samsung Galaxy privacy layer allow different levels of visibility control. People can dim or mask certain content depending on how exposed they feel in a particular environment. The feature is not an all-or-nothing lock; it lets users tune protections or disable them completely whenever they choose.
Samsung explains that this visual privacy system has been under development for more than five years. Engineers have tested and refined how content is obscured on screen, balancing readability for the owner with reduced visibility from side angles, across different lighting conditions and usage patterns.
The Samsung Galaxy privacy layer builds on the wider security foundation already present in Galaxy devices. For over ten years, Samsung Knox has provided hardware-based safeguards such as Knox Vault, along with ecosystem protections like Knox Matrix, which are designed to protect data, identities and connected devices.
Samsung stresses that strong security remains the base requirement for any meaningful privacy feature. The new layer adds protection right down to individual pixels on the display, extending defences from the internal hardware to what is actually visible. "This is privacy you can see and security you can feel – and it's coming to Galaxy very soon."
As of now, the rollout timeline is still under wraps. There is a chance this new feature will arrive with the upcoming Galaxy S26 series. We expect to get more details in the coming days.


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