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Bad.Technology

The newspaper of record for things that went very wrong.

171 fails indexed
17 categories
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Latest fails

30 of 171
Engineering Major Historical

A Private Fishing Club Killed 2,209 People and Nobody Was Ever Charged

On 31 May 1889, the South Fork Dam in Pennsylvania failed after years of neglect and unauthorised modifications by the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club — a retreat for Pittsburgh's wealthiest industrialists including Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick. The resulting flood…

Infrastructure

Kakao Datacenter Fire Knocks Out South Korea's Digital Infrastructure for Five Days

On 15 October 2022, a fire in an uninterruptible power supply battery room at the SK C&C data centre in Pangyo, South Korea, triggered an automatic shutdown of 32,000 servers. The outage knocked out KakaoTalk — used by 47 million Koreans, representing 93% of the population —…

Infrastructure Major Historical

Y2K: A Two-Digit Year Shortcut From the 1960s Costs the World $300 Billion to Fix in the 1990s

On 1 January 2000, the world held its breath as decades of two-digit year storage in software either triggered silent data corruption or — thanks to the largest coordinated software remediation in history — did not. The Y2K problem was a design decision made in the 1960s and…

Infrastructure Historical

Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collapses Four Months After Opening — Engineers Had Ignored Resonance Warnings

'Galloping Gertie', the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, opened on 1 July 1940 as the third-longest suspension bridge in the world. On 7 November 1940 — 129 days after opening — it entered a catastrophic resonant oscillation in a 68 km/h wind, developing a twisting motion exceeding 8…

Failed Projects

Masdar City: UAE's $22 Billion Zero-Carbon Smart City — 15 Years On, 5% Complete

Announced in 2008 with a target completion of 2016 and a budget of $18–22 billion, Masdar City was conceived as a car-free, zero-carbon settlement for 50,000 residents in the Abu Dhabi desert. Its centrepiece was a network of Personal Rapid Transit pods running in tunnels. By…

Infrastructure Major Historical

Soviet N1 Moon Rocket Explodes Four Times in a Row, Ending the USSR's Lunar Programme

The Soviet N1 rocket, the USSR's answer to Saturn V and intended to land cosmonauts on the Moon, failed all four of its launch attempts between 1969 and 1972. The second launch — on 3 July 1969, just 13 days before Apollo 11 — created one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in…

Automobile Major Historical

Uber Self-Driving Car Kills Pedestrian While Safety Driver Watches TV

Elaine Herzberg was struck and killed by an Uber autonomous test vehicle in Tempe, Arizona. The vehicle's sensors detected her 5.6 seconds before impact but the system classified her ambiguously and ultimately took no action. The safety driver was watching a video on a personal…

Startup Major Historical

Theranos: Blood-Testing Startup Built on Technology That Never Worked

Theranos claimed its Edison device could run hundreds of medical tests from a single finger-prick of blood. In reality, most tests were run on conventional third-party lab equipment. When WSJ reporter John Carreyrou exposed the fraud in 2015, Theranos was valued at $9 billion.…

AI

IBM Watson Health Sold for Parts After Failing to Deliver AI Medical Breakthroughs

IBM sold Watson Health to investment firm Francisco Partners after spending over a decade and billions of dollars attempting to apply AI to healthcare problems including cancer diagnosis. Watson for Oncology was abandoned by several hospitals after producing recommendations…

Security Major Historical

Spectre and Meltdown: CPU Design Flaws Expose Private Data Across Process Boundaries

Researchers disclosed Meltdown and Spectre, fundamental vulnerabilities in the speculative execution designs of virtually all modern CPUs. Meltdown allowed user processes to read kernel memory; Spectre allowed processes to read other processes' memory. Software patches caused…

Failed Projects

Google+ Shuts Down After Concealing Data Breach Affecting 52 Million Users

Google shut down Google+ for consumers on 2 April 2019. The closure was triggered by two security incidents: a March 2018 bug exposing private data of up to 500,000 users — which Google did not disclose publicly — and a November 2018 vulnerability affecting 52.5 million users.…