Microsoft Office’s ‘Woke’ Spellchecker Is Perfectly Fine and Will Cause Nobody to Freak Out

The feature flags when you've used non-inclusive or offensive terms and suggests better ones.

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
Microsoft Office
Screenshot: Microsoft 365/YouTube

In case you’d missed it, Microsoft Office has a “wokeness” editor that will flag your writing if it contains insensitive phrases. Welcome to the dumb culture wars, Office settings.

The software suite will call out your writing for being non-inclusive or containing offensive language. In the same way a spellchecker looks for typos and grammar mistakes, this inclusivity editor, available to Microsoft 365 subscribers, scans your work for inappropriate terms.

Advertisement

The feature goes beyond flagging ethnic slurs and will highlight when you’ve used words or phrases containing age bias, cultural bias, sexual orientation bias, gender bias, racial bias, as well as gender-specific language.

Advertisement

Some examples include changing “blacklist” and “whitelist” to “accepted” or “allowed list,” or swapping the gender-specific “postman” with “postal worker.” Similarly, “humanity” or “humankind” is recommended over “mankind,” and “expert” is suggested when the software flags “master,” a term linked with slavery. (In 2020, Microsoft-owned Github removed “master” and “slave” from its website.)

Advertisement

Microsoft says the goal isn’t to “correct all of society’s issues” but to make people consider more inclusive ways of writing. The company hired “native speakers and linguistic experts” in 20 languages to determine which “inclusiveness critiques” would be unwelcome in certain markets.

We verified that the feature is already available to Microsoft 365 customers but is turned off by default. And rather confusingly, Microsoft gives you the ability to turn off some inclusivity features while leaving others off, so you can have it check for gender bias but ignore ethnic slurs. When enabled, inappropriate terms are underlined in purple and an inclusive alternative is presented.

Advertisement

Microsoft told Daily Mail that the spellchecker might not be “suitable for all scenarios” and emphasized that it could be turned off if needed. While there are surely scenarios where people don’t want a nudge toward political correctness (say, if you were referencing a quote like “One giant leap for mankind”), you can also just ignore the purple underline.

“Microsoft understands that not every Editor suggestion may be suitable for all users and all scenarios,” the company told Daily Mail. “That’s why we let users be in control of their final output. Editor is a completely optional tool that users can turn on or turn off at any point. Editor does not make any autocorrections. The user has control over which suggestions they choose to use, if any. They will be able to turn on and off each one of them individually.”

Advertisement

It seems like Microsoft is tip-toeing, afraid to potentially anger folks who consider “wokeness” to be toxic, or whatever. If Microsoft wants people to know how “woke” it is, the company should stick to its convictions and make this a default feature that can be turned off when needed, instead of hiding the tool deep in the settings.

For now, to enable the feature, you have to go to the “Editor” tab in the top ribbon and select “Settings” near the button. From there, choose “Proofing” and “Settings...” then “Grammar and Refinement” from the drop-down. Here, you can select which categories of inclusivity you’d like the editor to include.

Advertisement

The spellcheck tool is available in the latest version of Microsoft Word in Microsoft 365, the company’s productivity cloud subscription service. Unfortunately, those who use the free browser-based version or the standalone one-payment Office 2019 will not be able to access the editor.

Update on Jan 14 at 2:20pm E.T.: Microsoft told Gizmodo that Editor was first made available in March 2020. A previous version of this article suggested the feature was new. We’ve updated the piece accordingly.

Advertisement