While Samsung’s latest crop of high-end smartphones has impressed from a design standpoint , many Galaxy S8, Galaxy S8+, and Galaxy Note 8 buyers have complained about the tech giant’s decision to plant a dedicated button for its much-maligned Bixby voice assistant on both devices.

Now, though, the company appears to be backing down—at least a little bit.

As spotted by Samsung blog SamMobile, the tech giant is rolling out a software update to at least some Galaxy devices that lets users disable the so-called Bixby Key from opening the assistant’s “Bixby Home” screen—which acts as a sort of Samsung-made information hub similar to Google’s Google Now page—upon being pressed.

That said, Samsung isn’t letting users ditch the assistant entirely. Long-pressing the Bixby button will still activate the assistant’s voice search function, and the Bixby Home screen will still live a right swipe away from a Galaxy phone’s home screen (provided you don’t disable that, too, or switch to a third-party launcher). Notably, there's still no official way to customize the button to perform another function either.

It’s not entirely clear which Galaxy devices are slated to receive the update or when exactly it will arrive. We have not seen the changes on a Galaxy S8 Active test unit from AT&T, for instance. But some outlets have already reported seeing the new version, so it shouldn’t be too long of a wait. Samsung did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Bixby itself has faced a rocky road over the past several months. Samsung’s pseudo-answer to voice assistants like Apple’s Siri and the Google Assistant, Bixby remained half-finished on Galaxy devices for several months due to a reported inability to fully comprehend English . When it rolled out in a more complete form, it faced notable criticism for being inaccurate, lacking integrations with various third-party apps, and generally failing to differentiate itself from the Google Assistant, which, crucially, already comes baked into Android phones.

All of this led some Galaxy users to develop workarounds that remap the Bixby button to open other apps, but Samsung has tried to prevent such attempts from working. That stance doesn’t appear to have changed here. But the new update should provide some relief for Galaxy users who've activated Bixby by accident too often for comfort and those who want to use the phone they paid for in the manner they want.