Last updated: June 9th, 2026 at 21:32 UTC+02:00
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Turns out I'm the snooper Privacy Display is protecting you from, even though I didn't mean to be.
Reading time: 2 minutes
Abhijeet Mishra / SamMobile
Galaxy S26 Ultra's Privacy Display in action - Source: Abhijeet Mishra / SamMobile
When I got the Galaxy S26 Ultra, I did what I imagine most people do with Privacy Display: I turned it on, felt a little safer, automated it a little, and didn't think much about it after that. It's a handy feature that makes it harder for the person next to you to read your screen, and I was glad to have it.
Then something happened a few days later that made me look at it completely differently. I stepped into the elevator in my building, and someone got in and stood right across from me. They pulled out their phone, and I could see everything on their screen.
I wasn't trying to look or be nosy. The screen was just there, right in front of me, and I could see all of it without any effort.
Here's the thing that got me: I'd spent the past few days thinking Privacy Display was there to protect me. Standing in that elevator, I realized that it also protects everyone else from people like me. People who aren't snooping on purpose but end up seeing everything anyway.
I do this all the time, and I'm guessing I'm not the only one: you glance up from your own phone, catch sight of someone's screen, and see more than you intended without ever thinking of it as snooping.
And that's the thing nobody really talks about. Every elevator, bus ride, or checkout line is full of people reading each other's screens while pretending they aren't. It's become such a normal part of using a phone in public that I'd stopped noticing it, until a feature built to stop it made me realize it was happening in the first place.
I'm not saying Privacy Display is some life-changing feature. It just deals with a small, everyday thing most of us put up with without thinking about it. And it's something I didn't expect to appreciate. With Privacy Display turned on, I'm not just keeping my screen to myself. I'm sparing people around me the guilt they might feel if they accidentally see what's on my screen.
Abhijeet's writing career started with guides for custom firmware for Samsung devices (including the original Galaxy S), and he moved to SamMobile in mid-2013 and worked up the ranks to Editor-in-chief. In addition to phones and mobile devices, his interests include gaming on both PC and console, PC hardware, and spending countless hours on YouTube watching videos on tech, movies, games, politics, and internet dramas.