Of course there are examples of software killing or being capable of killing (operating machinery or medical devices), but that doesn't apply to probably 90+% of software
Should've made my example a bit less extreme, but other forms of harm exist:
Downtime causing monetary damage (This one is obvious...)
Improper security measures causing leaks of customer data, making the victims a target for spam, or in extreme cases, identity theft, scams and (spear)phishing. One of the reasons why I am strongly opposed to having every random calorie counter app requiring you to sign up for an account asking you for your email and/or phone number.
I also recently saw a post here on HN about how VSCode had a bug that caused all commits to have a "Co-authored bv Copilot" line in the commit message, even if Copilot was disabled. One of the top replies mentioned how this could cause issues with employees working for companies that disallow the use of Copilot.
When you take these risks into account, I'm pretty sure you cover the vast majority of software.
Downtime causing monetary damage (This one is obvious...)
Improper security measures causing leaks of customer data, making the victims a target for spam, or in extreme cases, identity theft, scams and (spear)phishing. One of the reasons why I am strongly opposed to having every random calorie counter app requiring you to sign up for an account asking you for your email and/or phone number.
I also recently saw a post here on HN about how VSCode had a bug that caused all commits to have a "Co-authored bv Copilot" line in the commit message, even if Copilot was disabled. One of the top replies mentioned how this could cause issues with employees working for companies that disallow the use of Copilot.
When you take these risks into account, I'm pretty sure you cover the vast majority of software.