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T-Mobile and Apple Both Refuse to Replace Defective Phone Sold Through Carrier
A customer received a defective T-Mobile phone that failed to receive emergency calls from day one, but T-Mobile refused replacement and deferred to Apple, who refused because the 14-day return window had passed. The handoff between carrier and manufacturer creates an accountability gap that leaves customers with a non-functional device and no recourse. This gap is especially dangerous when emergency call failures are involved.
Progressive Modified Policy Terms and Added Unauthorized Driver Without Customer Consent
Progressive unilaterally added a speculative household driver to a customer's policy and changed coverage terms without authorization. The customer only discovered the change when reviewing their policy, having never consented to the modification. Insurers making unauthorized policy changes expose customers to incorrect coverage and billing without any notification or approval step.
AT&T Continues Charging Customers for Months After Cancellation Attempts
AT&T customers who stopped using services and attempted to cancel through multiple channels — store visits, phone, and online — continued to be charged for months after the intended cancellation date. The inability to complete a cancellation despite documented efforts constitutes unauthorized billing that is difficult to reverse without significant escalation. This pattern is widespread across major US telecom carriers and represents a structural consumer protection failure.
Bank Fraud Resolution Requires Customers to Repeatedly Re-Explain Their Case
Wells Fargo customers reporting fraud are transferred between departments and must re-explain the full situation each time, with no case continuity between agents. The fragmented process leaves fraud unresolved for extended periods while the customer bears the operational burden. This structural failure in fraud case management creates demand for consumer financial advocacy and bank escalation services.
Home Appliance Protection Plans Fail to Deliver Technician Coverage
Consumers who purchase extended protection plans for appliances discover the plans cannot fulfill basic commitments — finding a qualified technician — when repairs are actually needed. Customers are left mid-problem with a $100 voucher and instructions to self-source a repair, undermining the core value proposition of the warranty product. This is a structural gap in how service plan networks are built and managed.
Telecom Device Unlock Requires Simultaneous In-Store and Phone Escalation With No Clear Owner
Unlocking a carrier-locked phone requires customers to bounce between store staff and phone support, neither of whom can resolve the issue independently. Outstanding balances sent to collections create an additional barrier to unlocking, blocking customers from switching carriers. No self-service unlock verification path exists.
Insurance Companies Double-Charge Customers With No After-Hours Recourse
Auto insurance carriers have repeated incidents of charging customers twice for the same premium, with no way to dispute or recover funds outside business hours. Policyholders are left holding the loss overnight and must spend time in phone queues to recover their own money. This billing control gap represents a systemic trust failure.
Leaking Storage Pods Delivered on Moving Day With No Same-Day Replacement
Customers receive portable storage units with structural leaks that expose belongings to water damage on moving day — the worst possible time for a service failure. Replacement units are unavailable until the next day, forcing customers to absorb costs from delayed movers, reschedules, and damaged goods. The single-day, high-stakes nature of moving amplifies every service failure disproportionately.
Comcast Charges Tenants for Unauthorized Purchases on Bulk Community Contracts
Residents in communities with bulk Xfinity contracts receive charges for pay-per-view content they never purchased, with no mechanism to dispute at the tenant level. The refund is automatically denied and the ticket closed, leaving residents with no recourse against charges they did not authorize.
Unauthorized Internal Transfers Between Customer's Own Bank Accounts With No Resolution Path
Bank customers experience money moving between their own savings and checking accounts without their authorization, suggesting internal system errors or fraud within the bank's own infrastructure. The inability to get a clear explanation or resolution from the bank leaves customers without control over their own money and exposes a gap in internal transaction audit transparency.
Slack Mobile Push Notifications Stop Delivering Mid-Day Without Warning
Slack mobile notifications fire reliably for a period then silently stop for the remainder of the day, causing users to miss messages entirely. The failure is intermittent and non-obvious, making it difficult to diagnose or work around. This is a critical reliability gap for remote teams depending on mobile alerts.
Form Builders Lack Visual Drag-and-Drop Freedom
Existing form builders impose rigid layouts and limited customization. Users want true visual drag, drop, and resize capabilities without code constraints.
Mortgage Servicer Double-Charges Property Taxes in Escrow Using Inflated Overlay
LoanCare extracts double the actual county-assessed property tax through escrow by applying a fraudulent administrative neighborhood overlay. The homeowner's county-assessed tax is $3,400 but the servicer charges $6,900 annually, pocketing the difference with no disclosure or justification.
Intercom AI Support Bot Hallucinates and Validates Incorrect Customer Claims
Intercom's AI support agent generates incorrect information and sometimes sides with customers even when those customers are factually wrong. Support teams using AI deflection cannot trust the bot to represent company policy accurately, creating customer confusion and potential liability when the AI confirms false premises.
Credit Bureaus Failing to Correct Inaccurate Late Payment Reporting
Credit bureaus continue reporting inaccurate late payment data despite formal disputes from consumers, violating FCRA requirements for reasonable reinvestigation. Repeated disputes are ignored or result in superficial reviews that fail to actually verify accuracy. This systematic failure to correct errors damages consumer credit scores and undermines the FCRA framework.
Banks Refuse to Reimburse Customers for Fraudulent Wire Transfer Losses
Citibank refused to cover losses from fraudulent wire transfers despite the bank's failure to prevent the fraud. Banks face no consistent liability requirement for wire fraud losses, leaving customers fully exposed when scams succeed.
InDesign Multilingual Translation Destroys Layout and Styles
Translating Adobe InDesign documents using generic translation tools strips out layout-critical elements like styles, anchors, and paragraph tags, requiring complete manual reformatting after each translation. Language length differences like German expanding 30% further break layouts without overflow detection.
Design-token migrations leave hardcoded hex values buried in components
After moving a component library to design tokens, raw hex values remain inside detached instances and missed variants. Manual auditing across every variant is slow and error-prone, breaking single-source-of-truth claims.
SLO Breaches Require Manual Intervention with No Automated Remediation Path
When Kubernetes SLOs trip, teams must manually diagnose and respond, creating alert fatigue and slow mean-time-to-recovery. Auto-remediation tools exist but most apply fixes indiscriminately without considering trust hierarchies or blast radius. A structured trust ladder approach to automated remediation fills a real gap in production reliability tooling.
Bank Impersonation Scams Exploit Insider-Level Transaction Detail
Scammers use detailed transaction knowledge to impersonate bank fraud departments convincingly, directing victims to transfer money through legitimate bank channels. Once the transfer completes, banks classify it as authorized and deny reimbursement despite clear coercion. Real-time behavioral anomaly detection that flags coercion patterns before money moves is absent from consumer banking.