
Make sense of the world without being told what to think.
Orris is a companion that rewrites articles neutrally and shows how language shapes perception so you can see through the noise and decide for yourself.

A calm restatement of what the text says—without the spin. Evidence cards below show the exact phrases influencing interpretation.
Clarity in three steps
Orris doesn’t argue with the article. It separates what’s said from how it’s framed, then shows evidence so you can judge for yourself.
A calm restatement of the text that reduces spin and speculation.
Quote-grounded highlights of phrases doing persuasive work.
Detects patterns like certainty language, fear priming, and truth-sandwich structures.
Feature highlights
Built for real-world news reading: fast, transparent, and focused on helping you think.
Neutral restatement
Get a plain-language version first, before emotions take the wheel.
Quote-grounded evidence
No vague claims. Orris points to the exact phrases that shape perception.
Truth-sandwich detection
Catches when true elements are used to smuggle implied conclusions.
Orris is
- ✓A companion for thinking clearly
- ✓Transparent and quote-grounded
- ✓Designed for real-world confusion
- ✓Privacy-first by default
Orris is not
- —A fact-checker or truth oracle
- —A political scoring engine
- —Something that runs automatically
- —A replacement for your judgment
Privacy-first by design
Orris analyzes text only when you click Analyze. No accounts required. No browsing history tracking.
A note from the founder
I built Orris because I don't think most people are confused, I think they're exhausted.
The world is loud, the incentives are messy, and the algorithms shaping what we see are getting very good at steering attention. Most of what we read isn't outright false, it's framed, compressed, and emotionally tuned to move fast.
Orris isn't here to tell you what's true. It's here to make the mechanics visible, what's stated, what's implied, and what kind of language is doing the pushing, so you can decide for yourself.
If you try it and something feels off, tell me. With real feedback from real people, we can build tools that help maintain clarity as the noise gets smarter.
Clarity is a click away.
Install Orris and get a calm, quote-grounded read of what you’re looking at—before you react to it.