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Pattern: Three’s a Crowd

December 7, 2007 0 Comments
Pattern: Three’s a Crowd

[Adapted from Patterns in IT Litigation: Systems Failure (1976-2000)] Summary: This pattern actually lumps together two sub-patterns. In the first, the client purchases an IT system from the vendor by way of a leasing firm. The client is dissatisfied with the system and stops payment, whereupon the leasing firm sues the client. In the second […]

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Pattern: Irrational Exuberance

December 7, 2007 0 Comments
Pattern: Irrational Exuberance

[Adapted from Patterns in IT Litigation: Systems Failure (1976-2000)] Summary: The vendor makes claims for the functionality and/or performance benefits of the system. The client buys the system and has it installed. The client then believes that the system does not have the claimed benefits (performance, reliability and/or functionality). In some cases, the client ends […]

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Pattern: Faulty Towers

December 7, 2007 1 Comment
Pattern: Faulty Towers

[Adapted from Patterns in IT Litigation: Systems Failure (1976-2000)] Summary: The client buys the system from the vendor. The client then claims that the system is defective, i.e., it has errors during operation, crashes, and so on. The vendor makes attempts to repair it, allegedly with limited and unsatisfactory success. In some cases, the client […]

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Patterns in IT systems failure lawsuits

December 3, 2007 0 Comments
Patterns in IT systems failure lawsuits

Several years ago, while working at PricewaterhouseCoopers, I reviewed documents and information that we had gathered regarding roughly 120 “IT systems failure” lawsuits, that is, lawsuits regarding a dispute over a two- or three-party IT systems development project. The fact pattern surrounding each case tended to fall into one or two of six major patterns: […]

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