Samsung’s got its Galaxy Unpacked event on February 25, where the S26 series gets its official reveal, and the feature getting the most attention ahead of it is Privacy Display technology on the Galaxy S26 Ultra.
What it does is pretty straightforward. The display narrows its viewing angle so the person holding the phone can see everything normally, but someone peering over from the side sees basically nothing. You can switch it on and off, and there’s apparently an option to apply it to just part of the screen rather than the whole thing — handy if you only want to hide a notification or a chat window rather than blacking out everything.


It’s designed as a hardware-level feature, which is why it sounds like the standard S26 and S26+ won’t get it. Ultra only, at least for now.
The more interesting claim comes from tipster Ice Universe, who says Apple’s MacBook lineup will adopt Samsung’s privacy display tech by 2029. That’s four years away, and it’s one person saying it, so it’s firmly in the “maybe, who knows” category. But the logic tracks. Those clip-on privacy filters for laptops have been around forever, and they’re universally annoying — dim, ugly, and they never sit right. Building that capability straight into the panel would be a proper upgrade over sticking a bit of plastic on your screen every time you’re on a train.
If Samsung nails this on a phone first, laptops are the obvious next move. Whether it’s Apple who gets there first or someone else entirely, that’s the part nobody can answer yet.















