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Home»News»Samsung gives a glimpse of how Galaxy S26’s privacy screen will block peeping Toms
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Samsung gives a glimpse of how Galaxy S26’s privacy screen will block peeping Toms

News RoomBy News Room16 February 20262 Mins Read
Samsung gives a glimpse of how Galaxy S26’s privacy screen will block peeping Toms
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Samsung has uploaded yet another Galaxy S26 teaser, offering a glimpse of how the Privacy Display feature could work. It is a 15-second video published via the company’s official YouTube channel.

In the teaser, we can see a girl sitting in the subway, reading the third chapter of a fictional novel. She is holding the phone above her lap, which naturally makes the screen accessible from either side.

From Flex Magic panel to zero-peeking mode

However, when the people sitting around her try to peek at the screen, it goes all black. What’s interesting is that the teaser appears to establish a connection between peeking and the feature’s activation.

So far, we believed that the feature is based on the “Flex Magic Panel” with directional OLED pixels and clever software that recognizes what is on the screen and blocks either the specific area (such as a notification with banking details) or the entire screen (for when you’re entering passwords) for sideways viewing.

Even though Samsung doesn’t mention the feature in the teaser, aside from a caption that reads “For your eyes only,” the teaser shows the “zero-peeking privacy” toggle engage the moment someone tries to peep at the screen.

Exclusive!

The privacy screen on the Samsung S26 Ultra goes far beyond a global privacy mode. It also supports partial, localized privacy control.

Here is how it works.

You can apply privacy protection to only a specific part of the screen, for example a message notification… pic.twitter.com/RWJPtR0qc8

— Ice Universe (@UniverseIce) January 28, 2026

Could the front camera trigger Privacy Display?

Hence, in addition to recognizing the on-screen content, the Privacy Display feature might also use the punch-hole camera at the front to detect whether someone other than the user is looking at the screen, and use the Flex Magic Panel to adjust or limit the direction of the emitted light.

A camera-based activation could be a cool (and useful) trick for the Privacy Display, but we still have to wait to find out how the feature actually works post its announcement at the Galaxy Unpacked event on February 25, 2026.

We’ll also find out whether the feature is available across all models or only on the S26 Ultra.

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Samsung gives a glimpse of how Galaxy S26’s privacy screen will block peeping Toms

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