Yeah, unchecking those boxes makes the text look more human, but it's a massive trap. If you turn them off, carriers will rapidly flag your number for missing opt-out language and tank your delivery rates without telling you. The play here is to keep them checked but completely rewrite the default, robotic verbiage. You don't have to use their stiff template—just blend the compliance keys naturally into your regular sign-off. Instead of a dry disclosure block, write something like "Cheers, [Name]. (Reply STOP to opt out)" or "Let me know if that works! Reply STOP to unsubscribe." It hits the regulatory compliance requirements perfectly but still reads like a standard 1-to-1 personal text. Watch out for the carrier filters even after you change this. If your message hook sounds overly promotional or uses heavy sales jargon right after the opt-out line, T-Mobile and AT&T will still shadow-ban the outbound message. Drop your current intro script below if you want—happy to help clean up the phrasing so it doesn't trigger the spam filters.