Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Lock it down: Samsung brings encrypted folder support to Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge

Add as a preferred source on Google

We store our entire lives on our smartphones, and at one point or another, every user has sensitive content on their device they’d rather keep private from prying eyes. That’s surprisingly hard to do on Android or iOS without a third-party app, as neither platform gives users the ability to create encrypted storage spaces out of the box. Fortunately, Samsung is bucking that trend by launching Secure Folder support for its Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge smartphones.

Secure Folders actually debuted on last year’s Galaxy Note 7, though, regrettably, not many owners got the chance to become well-acquainted with the feature. That’s changing now that Samsung has released a downloadable version through its Galaxy Apps store. Secure Folders pretty much accomplish exactly what you’d imagine they would, allowing users to lock images, documents, and even apps behind a form of authentication, be it a PIN, password, pattern, or fingerprint.

Recommended Videos

What differentiates Secure Folder from other solutions, however, is that it can actually be used to store copies of apps with their own unique data, sandboxed from the rest of the phone. For example, a user could copy Twitter to a Secure Folder, and use that copy of the app for a separate account that wouldn’t be accessible from the original app on the home screen. As Samsung notes in its Newsroom post, “any notes, photos, contacts or browsing history within the apps stored in Secure Folder will remain separate from the same apps outside Secure Folder.”

That is a useful, powerful addition that is sure to please users managing high-risk information on their phones every day, made better by the fact that Secure Folders also support Samsung’s cloud-based backup and restore functionality. These backups remain isolated from the phone’s other general backup files, and are tied to a single Samsung account.

Finally, Samsung points out that Secure Folders can be customized with different names and icons to make them less conspicuous, or be hidden from the Apps screen entirely. Secure Folder is currently only compatible with Galaxy S7 devices running Android 7.0, though Samsung says it expects to bring the app to more of its phones in the future.

Adam Ismail
Former Contributor
Adam’s obsession with tech began at a young age, with a Sega Dreamcast – and he’s been hooked ever since. Previously…
Amazon Kindle Scribe Colorsoft review: The luxury ride to digital note-taking
It wants to be your indispensable digital diary, but it will test your Kindle loyalty, too.
Amazon Kindle Scribe

Quick Take

The Kindle Scribe Colorsoft is a new breed of e-readers from Amazon. Aside from being your reading companion, it also wants to double as your trusty note-taking device. And it does a terrific job at serving as a digital diary. The color display does a fine job of replicating the sensation of writing on paper, without any of the input lag woes you would notice on an ordinary tablet. 

Read more
Apple’s foldable is keeping Camera Control, but one-handed photography on a big foldable sounds tricky
Apple went through some serious engineering gymnastics to make it happen, but is it worth it?
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Apple's first foldable iPhone has been the subject of countless leaks, and the latest one comes from Weibo leaker Instant Digital. As reported by Notebookcheck, the leak suggests that the iPhone Fold will include the Camera Control button, despite being thinner than the iPhone Air when unfolded.

That's no small feat. Fitting the Camera Control button into a device that slim must have required some serious engineering work on Apple's part. But apparently, Apple felt it was worth it.

Read more
Your iPhone is getting smarter: Here’s what Apple Intelligence can do in iOS 27
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Apple has been steadily building out Apple Intelligence since its debut, and iOS 27 could be the most ambitious update to that effort yet. Backend code discovered by developer Nicolás Alvarez, later confirmed by MacRumors, points to at least four new AI-powered features coming to system apps. None of this is official yet, but the breadcrumbs are pretty convincing.

Visual intelligence is getting smarter

Read more