Explore Problems
Showing 2,514 of 4,293 problems · matching your filters
Home Depot Large Equipment Deliveries Arrive Damaged with No Escalation Path
Customers purchasing expensive equipment from Home Depot receive damaged goods and encounter poor escalation support when seeking resolution. Problems persist from the moment of delivery without clear remediation options. This structural gap in high-value retail delivery support leaves customers in prolonged disputes.
ISP agent pressures plan switch causing months of billing errors
A Comcast agent used false assurances to pressure an early plan switch, resulting in months of incorrect billing and unauthorized service changes. The lack of verifiable agreement records leaves consumers with no recourse when ISP agents make verbal commitments they do not honor.
No Agent-Ready Containerized Tooling for Digital Forensics Investigations
Digital forensics investigators and security researchers must manually assemble and configure complex toolchains like Volatility before conducting memory analysis, creating high barriers to entry. There is no turnkey containerized MCP server that exposes forensic tools in an agent-compatible interface. Building such infrastructure requires significant setup time and deep domain expertise that most practitioners lack.
Online Merchants Block Order Cancellations Even When Attempted Immediately After Purchase
E-commerce merchants prevent cancellations through buried no-cancellation policies and then refuse to cooperate with credit card chargebacks, trapping consumers in unwanted orders. Even same-day cancellation attempts are blocked by merchants who have designed systems to prevent order reversal. Credit card issuers often side with merchants, leaving consumers with defective or unwanted goods and no refund.
BMO Bank Requires Repeated Notarized ID Rounds Then Ignores Resolved Request With No Local Branch
BMO required a customer to submit notarized ID twice in different formats, finally passed authentication, then ignored the underlying request for a month before directing them to a branch that does not exist in their area. The combination of excessive procedural barriers and no follow-through makes basic banking administration impossible for customers without local branch access.
AT&T Retail Store Employees Make Service Promises That Corporate Refuses to Honor
AT&T in-store staff make explicit commitments about service transfers and pricing that AT&T's corporate systems do not honor. This retail-to-corporate disconnect leaves customers locked into plans based on promises that were never authorized. The incentive misalignment between store sales targets and corporate service delivery creates predictable customer harm at sign-up.
Gym Owners Lose Renewal Revenue From Lapsed Members Without Automated Follow-Up
Gym and fitness studios lose predictable recurring revenue when memberships lapse with no automated renewal reminder system in place. Manual follow-up is time-intensive and inconsistent, letting members quietly churn. Automated WhatsApp or SMS renewal reminders represent a direct revenue recovery tool with high willingness-to-pay from gym operators.
Travelers Cannot Easily Find the Right eSIM Plan for Specific Countries and Trip Lengths
International travelers who want to use eSIM data plans must compare dozens of providers across coverage maps, pricing structures, and country support without a unified discovery tool. The fragmented eSIM marketplace creates decision paralysis that drives users back to expensive roaming options. As eSIM adoption grows on newer devices, this discovery gap affects a rapidly expanding user base.
Bank of America Takes Months to Resolve Account Issues Despite Repeated Escalations
Customers report spending two or more months resolving issues with Bank of America that should take days, with frontline staff unable to fix problems and no clear escalation path. The institutional complexity of large banks creates resolution loops that exhaust customers. This represents a systemic failure in retail banking issue management rather than isolated incidents.
Productivity Apps Force AI Features on Users Who Want Focused, Distraction-Free Tools
Users of productivity tools like Notion report growing frustration with mandatory or prominent AI integrations that clutter interfaces and change workflows they relied on. There is no opt-out for users who want the pre-AI product experience. This creates an opening for tools that explicitly offer AI-free or AI-optional modes as a differentiator.
Telecoms Charge Full Month Fees for Same-Day Account Cancellations
Customers who close telecom accounts the same day they open them are charged for a full billing month rather than prorated usage. This practice disproportionately harms customers who cancel after discovering misrepresentation, and no prorated cancellation mechanism exists to challenge it through normal support channels.
Banks Silently Reduce Credit Limits on Good-Standing Accounts
Credit card issuers reduce customer credit limits without notice even when accounts are in good standing with on-time payments above the minimum. Customers discover the change only at point-of-sale, creating embarrassing declines and operational uncertainty. The absence of advance notification or explanation undermines trust and the utility of the card.
Shopify Free Trial Cancellation Buried Behind Multiple Navigation Layers
Shopify buries its free trial cancellation flow deep in multi-level navigation, making it difficult for users to exit without incurring charges. This dark pattern is a recurring complaint from new merchants who feel deceived. It reflects a broader issue of opaque offboarding flows in SaaS platforms targeting small business owners.
Xfinity reps give contradictory package information requiring hours of calls on move
Xfinity customers who move must re-negotiate service from scratch and receive contradictory pricing and package information across multiple representatives, spending hours on the phone unable to replicate their prior service at a comparable cost.
HomeAdvisor Contractors Price-Gouge Vulnerable Homeowners Who Cannot Oversee Work
An 85-year-old homeowner was charged $650 for a 15-minute faucet kit installation sourced through HomeAdvisor, with no price transparency or quality assurance from the platform. Home services lead-gen platforms provide no consumer protections for vulnerable populations unable to physically oversee work or negotiate pricing, enabling systematic price exploitation.
ISP sales reps mislead customers into plan switches then fail to deliver
Customers are misled by ISP store reps into switching plans or bundles with false promises about setup timelines and service availability, only to find their location is incompatible or the promised features do not exist. The switching process requires surrendering existing paid plans before issues are discovered, leaving customers with worse service and no recourse.
Insurance Companies Cancel Policies After Minor Claims Without Disclosing the Risk
State Farm canceled a multi-policy customer after two minor glass replacement claims, without ever disclosing that minor claims could trigger policy cancellation. This undisclosed risk causes customers to unknowingly sacrifice their insurance coverage for small payouts. The industry practice is widespread but rarely explained to policyholders.
Tech News Signal-to-Noise Ratio Drives Doomscrolling
Developers waste time scrolling through noisy feeds on Twitter, GitHub Trending, and Product Hunt to find valuable tech content. Existing aggregators still require manual filtering, leaving the core curation problem unsolved.
Slack Notification Volume Overwhelms Workers and Erodes Focus
The volume of Slack notifications in active teams creates a persistent attention tax that interrupts deep work and makes it difficult to distinguish urgent from ambient communication. Existing notification controls are too coarse to address the structural problem of always-on workplace messaging.
Users Want Locally-Run Software Instead of Recurring SaaS Subscriptions
A growing segment of users objects to SaaS on principle: perpetual subscription cost, data stored on third-party servers, tracking analytics, and the loss of access if payments lapse. Local-first software eliminates these concerns but lacks the polish, discoverability, and automatic updates of cloud-based products. The gap is not technical — it is distribution and product quality.