
The trouble with communicating via text, whether itâs an SMS, IM or email, is that the tone of your message may not always come through as you expect. Itâs especially difficult when youâre conversing with a business associate or someone youâve never met before.
FoxType tries to help you write more polite messages by analyzing your textual input, assessing your tone and offering suggestions for improvement.

The next time youâre concerned about whether an email youâre about to send is polite enough, just paste it into FoxType and itâll try to let you know if youâre being curt or courteous.
For example, saying, âThatâs harsh, Roger,â in response to an email comes across as impolite with a tone score of 30/100. FoxType gave me a bunch of suggestions and I changed it to âThatâs tough to deal with, Roger,â which returned a tone score of 71/100 (that counts as âpoliteâ).
The app seems to learn from your input and offers numerous rewrite suggestions. Some are genuinely helpful, while others are useless â when I entered âItâll be hard to ship next week,â, FoxType suggested âItâll be a little difficult to post weekend.â
It also suggests kinds of words and phrases that you can avoid (such as negative words like: âdeceptive and defectiveâ) and others that you can incorporate into your message to make it sound more polite.
FoxType is far from being perfect; its assessments arenât always accurate and its suggestions may not help much. Still, itâs a useful tool that should help you think about reviewing important emails before sending them along, particularly if youâre writing them when youâre stressed or upset.
It reminds me of Alex, an app designed to help stop you from publishing inconsiderate content â it looks for potentially offensive terms and suggests politically correct alternatives.
Our own Mic Wright noted that such apps are worrying as they encourage us to censor ourselves. But I believe that not everyone shares the same worldview and is equally aware of how sensitive some cultures are to words and actions.
If youâre writing for an audience youâre not familiar with or are dealing with subject matter thatâs difficult to convey without potentially offending people when thatâs not your intention, such tools can help you take a second glance at your messaging so it isnât derailed by how you put it across. Both Alex and FoxType only make suggestions â itâs up to you to decide how you want to express yourself.
You can try FoxTypeâs app on the Web right now. The team is working on a browser extension that will work with your Gmail account to help review messages right in your inbox.
†FoxType
Image credit: Dunnnk
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