PRIVATE browsing is great for keeping top secret web activity out of your iPhone’s history,

But what if you’ve left the tab open and someone goes snooping?

You can now lock Private Browsing tabs

1

You can now lock Private Browsing tabsCredit: Apple

Perhaps you’ve got a surprise birthday gift planned and you don’t want your other half to find out.

Well, fortunately Apple has a new trick up its sleeve.

In the iOS 17 update that was released to iPhones this week, users were pleased to notice a new feature in the Safari web browser.

The Private Browsing Mode already adds additional privacy protections which mean the app won’t remember the pages you’ve visited nor will it keep them in search history.

iPhone fans rave over 'death of voicemail' as free trick writes message out
Apple fans go wild for classic refurbished iPhone selling for £123 on Amazon

But that doesn’t stop those who know where to look from accessing any pages you’ve left open on there.

However, Apple has now decided to lock private browsing.

So, if anyone attempts to have a look they’ll need to use Face ID – or know your passcode.

Here’s how to set it up.

Most read in Phones & Gadgets

How to turn lock Private Browsing tabs

To lock Private Browsing pages, start by going to Settings.

Scroll down and look for Safari.

Go down to the Privacy & Security section.

Ensure Require Face ID to Unlock Private Browsing is switched on.

From now on, you’ll need to use Face ID whenever you leave Private Browsing Mode and return to it.


We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online Tech & Science team? Email us at [email protected]


This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk

You May Also Like

Britons scroll more than the length of the Eiffel Tower on their smartphones every month

Britons scroll more than the height of the Eiffel Tower on their…

We love this iPhone 12 deal: Get 100GB for ONLY £35p/m

WE love this deal that gets you a quality smartphone but doesn’t…

Third of ALL Americans exposed to Agent Orange pesticide ‘linked to cancer’, new study warns

A THIRD of all Americans have traces of potentially cell-changing weed killer…

Microsoft Courts New Customers on the Farm: Cows

Boring is the new sexy in Silicon Valley. As the coronavirus crisis…