I'm sure you could lower the GDP of a country by introducing specially crafted bugs into their supply chain.
You could probably affect rates of reproduction, divorce rates.. so on
Here's an example. I want to copy some text from my browser and paste it into conversations. I copy the text. I app switch back to conversations. At first, the software keyboard is open. Then after about a half second, the keyboard closes. This is already causing a time delay. Now I can either paste into the input box at the bottom or tap it to open the keyboard up again. It's faster to do it while it's at the bottom.
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I long press in the box. This opens the context menu to paste, but the context menu is overlaid by this shit notification that graphene OS adds to let you know that you have just pasted from the clipboard. Then I have to wait for this notification to disappear so I can see my context menu. So this is a bad option.
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I tap the input box to open the keyboard which moves the input box upward. Now I can do the same thing and the notification about pacing into the clipboard will not cover my context menu. But now with this workflow, things are slow because I have to wait for the keyboard to close when I switch apps, then tap in the box and open it again. It's just a stupid waste of time that I have to do every time I switch windows.
This inherently wastes my time and contributes to stress. The time that I was forced to waste could've been used to find my long-sought-after wife, but nope.
It's also about the cumulative effect of a ton of little bugs like this. It's more the cumulative effect than any single bug. One issue is fine, two is acceptable, but three, four.. Eight?
Software is deliberately being designed to waste our time and kill us through lack of quality assurance.
I'm being honest, it gets me thinking about new concepts. Like how the CIA could try to cause people to have a psychological collapse or to push them over the edge and commit acts of violence through extremely bad user experience.