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Awesome flipped

Awesome flipped

The lists for not very awesome things!

MIT license

Contents

πŸŒ… Sunset Yard

Beloved products and services that were discontinued (sorted by community love)

Most Loved & Missed

  1. Google Reader (2013) - RSS feed aggregator that dominated the market
  2. Vine (2017) - 6-second video platform that birthed internet culture
  3. Google Wave (2012) - Revolutionary real-time collaboration platform
  4. Windows Phone (2017) - Microsoft's mobile OS with unique UI
  5. Google+ (2019) - Social network that never found its audience
  6. Adobe Flash (2020) - Powered early web animations and games
  7. Internet Explorer (2022) - The browser everyone loved to hate
  8. Clippy (2007) - Microsoft's "helpful" office assistant
  9. Winamp (2013) - "It really whips the llama's ass!"
  10. Yahoo! Messenger (2018) - Pioneer of instant messaging

Gaming Legends Gone

-- Needs contributions --

Social Media That Couldn't

  • Orkut (2014) - Google's first social network
  • MySpace (2019) - The original social media king
  • Friendster (2015) - Social networking pioneer
  • Google Buzz (2011) - Failed social layer for Gmail

πŸͺ¦ Corporate Graveyards

Companies known for discontinuing beloved products

Killed by sites

Google Graveyard

Notable Casualties: 280+ products discontinued

  • Google Reader - RSS aggregation service
  • Google Wave - Real-time collaboration
  • Google+ - Social networking platform
  • Google Glass (Consumer) - AR glasses
  • Google Hangouts - Messaging service
  • Google Play Music - Music streaming
  • Google Inbox - Email client
  • Google Allo - Smart messaging app
  • Google Duo - Video calling app
  • Google Podcasts - Podcast platform
  • Stadia - Cloud gaming service
  • Google Currents - Social network for enterprises Full list here: https://killedbygoogle.com/ | Source

Microsoft Graveyard

  • Windows Phone - Mobile operating system
  • Internet Explorer - Web browser
  • Windows Media Player - Media player
  • Clippy - Office assistant
  • Zune - Digital media player
  • Kinect - Motion sensing device
  • Microsoft Bob - Alternative interface
  • Windows Live Messenger - Instant messaging

Meta/Facebook Graveyard

  • Parse - Backend-as-a-Service platform
  • Facebook Gifts - Gift purchasing service
  • Facebook Credits - Virtual currency
  • Facebook Places - Location check-in service
  • Facebook Beacon - Advertising system
  • Facebook Home - Android launcher

Apple Graveyard

  • iPod (Classic/Mini/Shuffle) - Portable music players
  • iPhoto - Photo management software
  • Aperture - Professional photo editing
  • QuickTime - Multimedia framework
  • Dashboard - Widget platform
  • iWeb - Website creation tool

Amazon Graveyard

  • Fire Phone - Amazon's smartphone
  • Amazon Dash Buttons - Physical ordering buttons
  • Amazon Drive - Cloud storage service
  • Alexa for Business - Enterprise voice assistant
  • Amazon Spark - Social shopping feature

πŸ“’ Misinformation & Disinformation Accounts

Platform-Specific Concerns

TikTok

Common Misinformation Types:

  • Health/Medical misinformation
  • Political conspiracy theories
  • Financial scams and "get rich quick" schemes
  • Pseudoscience content
  • Dangerous challenges and "hacks"

Warning Signs:

  • Accounts with generic usernames and stolen profile pictures
  • Content that makes extraordinary claims without evidence
  • Promotion of unverified medical treatments
  • Accounts that frequently repost content from banned users

Instagram

Common Misinformation Types:

  • Wellness and alternative medicine scams
  • Cryptocurrency and investment fraud
  • Body image and diet misinformation
  • Political propaganda through memes
  • Fake news through manipulated images

Warning Signs:

  • Accounts selling miracle cures or supplements
  • Investment advice from unqualified individuals
  • Before/after photos that seem too good to be true
  • Political content with no credible sources

General Red Flags Across Platforms

  • Accounts that consistently share content without credible sources
  • Users who refuse to engage with fact-checking or corrections
  • Accounts that frequently pivot between different conspiracy theories
  • Content creators who monetize fear and anxiety
  • Profiles that spread content designed to divide communities

Note: We don't list specific account names to avoid giving them additional attention and traffic.

πŸ’° Worst Scams

Wellness & Health Scams

  1. Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) Health Products

    • Essential oils claiming to cure diseases
    • Weight loss pills and "detox" teas
    • Unregulated supplements with miracle claims
  2. Alternative Medicine Fraud

    • Fake cancer "cures"
    • Chelation therapy for autism
    • Homeopathic "vaccines"
    • Miracle Mineral Solution (MMS/chlorine dioxide)
  3. Beauty & Fitness Scams

    • "Wrapping" treatments for weight loss
    • Teeth whitening products that damage enamel
    • Unregulated cosmetic procedures
    • Fake fitness supplements

Investment & Crypto Scams

  1. Ponzi Schemes

    • Bernie Madoff's $65 billion scheme
    • OneCoin cryptocurrency fraud ($4 billion)
    • Bitconnect lending platform
  2. Romance Scams

    • Online dating financial manipulation
    • Military impersonation scams
    • Social media catfishing for money
  3. Tech Support Scams

    • Fake Microsoft/Apple support calls
    • Computer "virus" removal scams
    • Software licensing fraud

Social Engineering Scams

  1. Phishing Attacks

    • Fake bank/PayPal emails
    • Social media account hijacking
    • Business email compromise (BEC)
  2. Identity Theft

    • Social Security number harvesting
    • Tax refund fraud
    • Medical identity theft

πŸ”’ Major Cyber Attacks

Ransomware Attacks

  1. WannaCry (2017)

    • Affected 300,000+ computers globally
    • Targeted Windows systems with NSA exploit
    • Caused major disruptions to UK's NHS
  2. NotPetya (2017)

    • $10+ billion in damages
    • Targeted Ukraine but spread globally
    • Destroyed data even after ransom payment
  3. Colonial Pipeline (2021)

    • Shut down largest US fuel pipeline
    • DarkSide ransomware group
    • Caused widespread gas shortages
  4. Kaseya (2021)

    • Supply chain attack affecting 1,500+ companies
    • REvil/Sodinokibi ransomware
    • $70 million ransom demand

Data Breaches

  1. Yahoo (2013-2014)

    • 3 billion accounts compromised
    • Largest data breach in history
    • Hidden for years before disclosure
  2. Equifax (2017)

    • 147 million Americans affected
    • Social Security numbers and financial data stolen
    • Poor incident response and delayed notification
  3. Facebook/Cambridge Analytica (2018)

    • 87 million users' data harvested
    • Used for political advertising
    • Violated user consent and privacy
  4. Marriott/Starwood (2018)

    • 500 million guests affected
    • Passport numbers and payment cards stolen
    • Suspected state-sponsored attack

State-Sponsored Attacks

  1. SolarWinds (2020)

    • Russian SVR hack of software supply chain
    • Affected 18,000+ organizations
    • Compromised multiple US government agencies
  2. Microsoft Exchange (2021)

    • Chinese Hafnium group
    • Zero-day exploits in email servers
    • 250,000+ servers compromised
  3. Ukrainian Power Grid (2015)

    • First known cyberattack on power grid
    • Left 230,000 without power
    • Attributed to Russian hackers

Cryptocurrency Hacks

  1. Mt. Gox (2014)

    • 850,000 Bitcoin stolen (~$460M at the time)
    • Largest Bitcoin exchange collapse
    • Led to increased regulation
  2. Coincheck (2018)

    • $530 million in NEM cryptocurrency stolen
    • Largest cryptocurrency theft at the time
    • Highlighted exchange security issues
  3. FTX Collapse (2022)

    • $8+ billion in customer funds missing
    • Fraud and mismanagement by executives
    • Devastated crypto market confidence

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please ensure all information is:

  • Factually accurate and well-sourced
  • Presented objectively without bias
  • Focused on educational value
  • Respectful and constructive

When adding content:

  1. Verify information from multiple credible sources
  2. Include relevant dates and impact metrics
  3. Avoid promoting harmful content or giving bad actors attention
  4. Focus on lessons learned and prevention strategies

Please open an issue or submit a pull request with your suggestions.

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