Explore Problems
Showing 4,851 of 4,852 problems · discovered and scored from global sources
Slack Cannot Reliably Surface Priority Messages in Noisy Teams
As Slack workspaces scale, high-priority messages get lost in channel noise with no intelligent triage layer. Current notification rules are binary and require constant manual tuning. Teams miss critical communications despite being technically notified.
Mortgage Servicers Changing Payment Amounts Without Notifying Borrowers
Mortgage servicers adjust monthly payment amounts due to escrow changes without notifying borrowers in advance. Payments based on the old amount get posted to suspense accounts rather than applied to the loan, triggering late charges and credit bureau damage. Borrowers only discover the issue when they notice credit score drops.
Accessible Text-to-Speech Tools Either Sound Robotic or Require Expensive Subscriptions
Students, writers, and readers with learning differences who need quality text-to-speech find themselves choosing between free tools with robotic-sounding output and premium subscriptions costing over $100 per year. The gap affects accessibility for users who rely on audio reading for comprehension or productivity. As AI voice quality improves, the price barrier rather than technology is the primary obstacle to broad adoption.
University timetables shift weekly and manual calendar entry is a chore
Students whose schedules change every week burn time re-keying rooms and times into their calendar. A photo-based parser is the obvious shortcut but distribution is hard.
Monday.com Automation Builder Too Restrictive for Complex Workflows
Monday.com automation parameters are too limited for users trying to build sophisticated workflows, forcing manual steps or workarounds. Power users who rely on automation to eliminate operational overhead hit a ceiling that competitors have cleared.
Collection Agency Breaks Pay-for-Delete Promise After Payment Received
Consumer paid a collection in full after the collector verbally promised to delete the item from the credit report, but the item remains. Pay-for-delete agreements are commonly made but rarely honored, leaving consumers with paid collections still harming their credit. This broken-promise pattern affects credit recovery for millions of consumers.
Team Communication Apps Have Overly Complex UX That Obscures Conversations
Users report team communication tools have too much visual complexity, making it difficult to track conversations and identify who responded to specific threads. UX overload in collaboration apps drives adoption of simpler alternatives. There is demand for focused, clarity-first communication tools that reduce cognitive load.
Credit Card Dispute Process Fails When Banks Side With Merchants
Despite providing clear pricing screenshots and communications, Wells Fargo sided with the merchant in a billing dispute for overcharged junk removal services. The chargeback process lacks fairness when consumer evidence is ignored. This systemic gap leaves consumers unprotected against merchant overcharges.
AT&T Removes Military Discounts Without Notice and Provides No Single-Call Resolution
AT&T silently removed a military discount from a long-term customer account and required a full day of transfers through seven agents with no resolution. The combination of unannounced account changes and broken escalation paths creates high-trust-cost incidents for a segment AT&T courts.
T-Mobile Store Representatives Misrepresent Promotions and Hidden Costs at Point of Sale
T-Mobile retail store employees told customers that tablets and child location trackers were free during a plan switch, but both came with charges the customers were never clearly told about. The pricing presented during the sale also differed from what appeared on the bill. This type of in-store misrepresentation creates post-purchase billing disputes that undermine carrier trust.
Credit Card Programs Transfer Balances to New Accounts Without Consent
When credit programs wind down, outstanding balances transfer to new accounts customers never agreed to open, without notification through any accessible channel. Customers discover the new account only when it appears as a derogatory mark on their credit report. The lack of meaningful consent for account creation creates both credit damage and legal gray areas.
PODS sales team promises delivery logistics that drivers confirm are impossible
PODS sales representatives promise specific delivery placements to close bookings, while drivers confirm these placements are routinely unfeasible. Post-call charges not discussed during the sale are also added, with no recourse beyond the original contract terms.
Truck renters charged bogus cleaning fees with no documentation or dispute path
Moving truck rental customers face large post-return cleaning fees applied arbitrarily to vehicles returned in normal used condition, with no pre-rental condition record and no accessible dispute mechanism. Renters have no way to prove the vehicle was already dirty at pickup. This structural gap in rental condition documentation enables fee abuse that recurs across the truck rental industry.
ClickUp Changes Plans and Removes Features Without Customer Notification
ClickUp has silently changed subscription plans and removed features without informing affected customers, causing unexpected account disruptions and eroding trust. Users are left to discover changes on their own.
No Rigorous Benchmark for SAST Multi-File Exploit Chain Detection
Existing SAST benchmarks measure only simple single-file taint flows, failing to evaluate whether tools can correlate low-severity findings across multiple files into compound exploit paths. Security engineers and tool vendors lack a statistically rigorous, tool-agnostic way to measure how well static analysis tools detect chained vulnerabilities or resist adversarial evasion techniques. This gap means SAST tools can appear performant on standard benchmarks while completely missing real-world attack patterns.
AWS Zombie Resources Drive Up Cloud Bills Undetected
DevOps teams are frequently asked to find orphaned AWS resources and explain high cloud bills but lack good open-source tooling. Existing FinOps SaaS platforms are expensive, and writing one-off scripts is tedious and error-prone.
Escrow estimates in closing disclosures diverging from servicer actual charges
Homeowners discover post-closing that the escrow amounts estimated in their Closing Disclosure differ significantly from what the servicer actually collects, triggering unexpected shortfalls and account disputes. The gap between title company estimates and servicer calculations is a known but unsolved coordination problem. Borrowers have no tool to verify escrow accuracy before the first payment is due.
Debt collectors ignoring cease-contact orders and calling workplaces
Collectors continue contacting consumers at their places of employment despite written cease-contact orders, violating FDCPA. Each call creates employment risk for the debtor and constitutes an independent violation, but enforcement requires the consumer to file a lawsuit. There is no real-time mechanism to enforce cease orders or block specific collector numbers.
AT&T refuses to refund account credits after service cancellation
Customers who cancel AT&T service lose any remaining account credits, with no reachable human support post-cancellation. The policy effectively confiscates money owed to former subscribers. There is demand for telecom exit tools that help customers document and recover credits before cancellation.
T-Mobile charges customers for returned equipment even with confirmation receipts
Customers who return telecom equipment and receive confirmation emails are still billed for non-return fees. Resolving the erroneous charge requires multi-day waits and repeated calls. The pattern points to a systemic billing reconciliation failure and demand for automated telecom billing dispute tools.