Scam calls are evolving. Your phone is about to do the same. Samsung’s upcoming foldables are shaping up to get an intelligence upgrade, with Google’s Gemini-powered Scam Detection expected to expand to devices like the Galaxy Z Fold 8, Galaxy Z Flip 8, and even a new Wide Fold variant. And yes, this time your phone may finally be better at spotting fraudsters than your patience at 7 PM after the fifth unknown call of the day.

Samsung joins the scam detection club

Google has been steadily building Scam Detection into its AI ecosystem, using Gemini to analyze live phone conversations and flag suspicious behavior as it happens. So, if a caller starts sounding like they’re scripting a heist movie, your phone gently steps in and says, “Maybe don’t trust this one.” On Pixel devices, this feature runs directly on-device, so it doesn’t send your calls to the cloud for analysis. That keeps things private while still letting AI do the heavy lifting of spotting patterns that usually scream scam.

Earlier this year, Samsung teamed up with Google to bring this capability to its own Phone app, starting with the Galaxy S26 series. That meant users didn’t have to rely on Google’s default dialer anymore to get scam protection baked in. There was a catch, though. The rollout has so far been limited to English-speaking users in the US, leaving many global users still answering unknown calls the old-fashioned way. Now, that seems to be changing.

Recent findings from the Phone by Google app suggest that Scam Detection is being prepared for Samsung’s next-generation foldables. The feature appears linked to several model families, including the Galaxy Z Fold 8, the Galaxy Z Flip 8, and a new Wide Fold device. These appear alongside a wide range of regional variants, suggesting a global rollout strategy. In short, Samsung isn’t just testing the waters here. It looks like it’s preparing to scale the feature across markets from day one.

Beyond the US-only limitation

Google’s Scam Detection already works in multiple regions on newer Pixel devices, including the Pixel 9 and Pixel 10 series. That suggests Samsung’s eventual rollout may not remain as geographically restricted as it is today. If anything, the inclusion of multiple regional variants in the code points to a broader ambition: making scam protection a standard feature rather than a market-specific perk. And honestly, it’s about time.

Samsung is expected to unveil its next foldables at its usual Galaxy Unpacked event around July 2026. While new hinges, displays, and processors will likely take the spotlight, this AI-powered call protection adds something more practical to the mix. And if Samsung and Google get this right, your next foldable might just be the smartest thing you use before you even unlock it.

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