What to reply when you accidentally outed information that wasn't yours to share
Heaviest of the small apologies. The reply has to acknowledge the breach, take responsibility for the impact (not the intent), and ask what they need from you next. It's a pattern you've watched build up — this page is tuned to that exact framing. The example replies below cover three angles you can pick from; copy any one into the chat or hit the CTA to keep workshopping with myalexai.
Open this in myalexai →Reply ideas
Confident — short, specific, owned
i owe you an apology. i [named the action], and i regret it. no excuses — i should have done better.
Chill — light when the situation allows — alt take
my bad on the slow reply. answer to your actual question is x.
Informative — when context actually helps — alt take
two things: one, i was wrong on [specific]. two, here's the context for what was going on, not as an excuse but so we can avoid this version next time.
Confident — short, specific, owned — when the first feels too soft
that wasn't fair of me. i was wrong about [specific thing] and i'm sorry. here's what i'm going to do differently.
Why this tone fits
Apologies are the messages people redraft the most. The trap is over-explaining. Confident-short is right almost always — name the specific thing, take responsibility, propose what's next. Chill is for low-stakes apologies where you're solid with the person; over-formality reads as anxious. Informative is for when context genuinely matters and is welcome; if you're not sure, don't.
Pro tip: The best apology is followed by the matching action within 24-48 hours. myalexai will draft the apology AND the calendar invite that backs it up.
Try myalexai free — no fluff, no BS
Drop your exact text, hit send, get four reply options in seconds. Pick one, edit it, fire it off.