In a wide-ranging Reddit Ask Me Anything (AMA) post, Samsung has addressed concerns over Galaxy AI, which has been a headline feature on its phones since the introduction of the Galaxy S24 series.

Both the questions and the responses give us an interesting look at how people relate to Galaxy AI, and how Samsung still has work to do convincing people it adds value to its phones.

AI skeptics

A person holding the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra

The questions have been put to Annika Bizon, Samsung UK and Ireland’s VP of Product and Marketing for Mobile Experience, and Redditors have not given her an easy time.

“I’m using the Galaxy S26 Ultra and I can’t find the niche in which AI is anything but a burden,” writes one Samsung phone owner, and another says: “How are you supporting customers that don’t want AI on their devices?”

Another questions how Galaxy AI uses data shared to Galaxy AI. One person asks how Galaxy AI actually helps them day-to-day, and another still writes, “From conversations I have, many people are extremely wary of AI. Would Samsung ever be interested in servicing this market?”

The tone of the questions will likely not please Samsung, as most center around Galaxy AI not being a desirable feature, one that they don’t really understand, or struggle to find any value in.

Samsung responds

AI wallpaper generation on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra

To Samsung’s credit, it answers these questions in the AMA. Responding to the person wary of AI, Bizon writes:

We really believe the moment AI will truly succeed is when it becomes so functional that it becomes invisible. We like to think it will be like the electricity that powers your home, something you depend on without even thinking about it. You just expect it, and it will be genuinely useful to everything you do in your life. It should feel effortless but, most importantly, in your control.

It’s a measured and interesting reply, and this trend continues when Bizon answers the question, or rather statement, that someone finds AI a burden on the S26 Ultra:

My advice for people who are struggling to navigate new ways of being more productive with AI is to start with one feature and let it do something for you. Once AI earns your trust in one area, you start noticing where else it might actually help you rather than where it’s just there. Your phone should work for you, not the other way around.

The features mentioned most are the new Now Nudge, which prompts certain tasks, actions, reminders and apps based on what’s happening on screen, along with Note Assist, which records, formats, and summarizes meetings.

Security reassurance

samsung-galaxy-z-flip-7-tent-hero
The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 partially open on a log

Concerns over Galaxy AI’s use of data are addressed by reiterating Samsung’s standard, and comprehensive suite of Knox security features, with the promise that cloud-based AI data is processed to deliver an answer and then deleted.

What about someone who doesn’t want AI on their Samsung phone? Bizon explains:

You can go into Galaxy AI settings, and choose which AI features you want on and off. [It’s] completely customizable and personal to your preferences. We believe in giving people genuine choice over how they use their technology. If you want a Samsung device without AI features running, that’s a completely valid way to use it and we support that. The phone will work brilliantly either way.

This isn’t quite the same as a Galaxy phone without AI at all, something which may become a reality in the future, but a reasonable option for anyone who wants to minimize AI on their phones at the moment.

S Pen, innovation, and missed questions

A person holding the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra and S Pen

Responses to the AMA seemed to stop after a couple of hours, but many of the unanswered questions also focus on AI, and continue to paint a bleak picture of people’s response to Galaxy AI and AI in general.

For example, someone asks, “When are you going to shift focus away from what most people consider useless AI features,” and another says “Why is there currently such an obsessive push for AI on your smartphones,” while one person simply requests for Samsung to simply, “Stop putting AI in your phones.”

s26 ultra product image

Android Police logo

8/10

SoC

Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5

Display type

Dynamic AMOLED 2X

Display dimensions

6.9-inch

Outside of Galaxy AI, it wouldn’t be a conversation about recent Galaxy phones without someone requesting Bluetooth on the S Pen, a feature Samsung removed with the Galaxy S25 Ultra, and another saying Samsung has stopped innovating, and how they have no reason to upgrade from their Galaxy Note 9.

While Samsung fielded the AMA questions effectively, and there are certainly a range of Galaxy AI features that some may find useful, it’s clear the company still has work to do in convincing others Galaxy AI adds value to its phones.