Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. Evergreens

How to make face unlock more secure in the Samsung Galaxy S10 line

Add as a preferred source on Google
Samsung Galaxy s10e hands-on
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Exciting technology like facial recognition is making our smartphones more functional than ever, but at what cost? We’re learning that there are several ways to game the software, which leaves your data and information vulnerable to attack. So, how can you protect yourself?

Thankfully, there are some steps you can take to make face unlock on your Galaxy S10 more secure. We’ll fill you in on everything you need to know in this article.

Recommended Videos

Setting up face recognition

If you want a secondary way of unlocking your phone, you can enable face recognition by heading to Settings > Biometrics and security > Face recognition. Now when the screen on any of the S10 phones turns on, you’ll notice a light circling the hole-punch camera (the selfie camera floating on the screen at the top right). This means the camera is looking for your face, and once it finds it, the phone will unlock. You can set it to jump straight to the home screen by toggling off Stay on Lock screen.

The problem is the technology is very basic, and that means it’s not very secure. A simple trick of showing the camera a photo of your face — printed out or on another phone — will fool it to unlock the phone. Just take a look at our test in the tweet below:

So yeah, the #GalaxyS10 can be unlocked with an image of your face. BUT go into Settings > Biometrics and Security > Face recognition and toggle off "Faster recognition." Haven't been able to fool it with an image since, and the speed difference doesn't feel that much slower. pic.twitter.com/n13sEmn8mt

— Julian Chokkattu (@JulianChokkattu) March 7, 2019

We’ve pointed images of our face toward the Galaxy S10’s selfie camera, and it never fails to unlock. That’s a little alarming, even if Samsung does state clearly that facial recognition isn’t secure. Face recognition on the S10 series will still never be secure enough to use as an authentication method for sensitive apps, but there is a way to make it less easy to spoof.

Slightly more secure

In Settings > Biometrics and security > Face recognition, toggle off Faster recognition. What this does is make face recognition a little slower but a little more secure, so it won’t be fooled with just a photo of your face. Next to the Faster recognition option, it does warn, “Faster recognition improves speed but reduces security, increasing the possibility of a video or image being incorrectly recognized as your face.”

We’ve turned it off and then tried to spoof it with the same test as before, but the phone wouldn’t unlock whatsoever. The difference in speed is also negligible. Now, we’re not saying it won’t be susceptible to any kind of spoofing, but it should offer just a little bit more peace of mind if you still want to use face unlock.

Ultimately, if the security of Samsung’s face recognition worries you one bit, it’s likely a better idea to not use it at all, and just stick to the fingerprint sensor.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Mobile and Wearables Editor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
Fitbit is becoming Google Health, and it’s getting a bunch of wellness upgrades
Google is finally treating health tracking as a platform play, pulling in medical records, third-party fitness data, and AI coaching in a way that Fitbit's standalone app was never built to handle.
New Google Health app.

Google is officially pulling the plug on the Fitbit app, replacing it with the new Google Health app on May 19, 2026. It is quite ironic, as the company just announced a new Fitbit Air screenless fitness tracker, but the change will take place via an OTA update. 

This is happening after Fitbit’s fifteen-year run, wherein it gathered millions of fitness-focused users and provided them with various health trackers and meaningful insights via its software. 

Read more
Google’s Fitbit Air is a screenless $99 Whoop rival, and its core features don’t need a subscription
The real competitive edge Fitbit Air has is that Google separated the hardware cost from the subscription entirely, giving users something Whoop never has: a choice about whether to pay monthly at all.
Fitbit Air in all the colors.

Google just made its most serious moves yet into the fitness tracker market. The maker of the Pixel Watch has officially unveiled the Fitbit Air, a screenless health band priced at $99.99. Unlike Whoop, which locks all the fitness data behind a paywall, Fitbit Air’s core health-tracking features will remain free. 

Currently available for pre-orders, the device will start shipping across 21 countries starting May 26, 2026. You can get the tracker in four Pixel-like colors, including Obsidian, Lavender, Fog, and Berry, and choose from three different strap styles: Performance Loop, Active Band, and Elevated Modern Band. 

Read more
Android boss shoots down a Liquid Glass copyjob on Pixels, and that’s a relief
While many Android OEMs have already copied iOS 26's aesthetic, Google says Pixels are staying the course.
Image showing the UI design similarity between iPhone 16 Pro and Honor 600 Pro.

Google's president of the Android Ecosystem has shut down speculation that Android will adopt Apple's Liquid Glass design language, at least on Pixel devices. In response to a mockup of Liquid Glass on a Pixel 11 posted on X, Sameer Samat said, "Not happening. Y'all are wild." The response is welcome news for Android fans who have watched a wave of manufacturers copy Apple's aesthetic over the past year.

Several Android OEMs have already taken the bait

Read more