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Vitiogenic

(adj. /vɪti.oʊˈdʒɛnɪk/).

Etymology: From Latin vitium ("flaw") + Greek -genic ("producing").

Definition: Describing a negative outcome that emerges from the flaws within a system's rules or structure, not from the malicious intent of the people operating within it. The process is called vitiogenesis.
Technology: "The social media algorithm, while not designed with malicious intent, had the profoundly vitiogenic effect of amplifying polarizing content to maximize user engagement."

Economics: "The 2008 financial collapse was not the result of a single criminal but of a vitiogenic system where regulations and incentives inadvertently encouraged widespread, catastrophic risk-taking."

Social Policy: "Despite the lawmakers' good intentions, the new welfare policy proved to be vitiogenic, creating bureaucratic hurdles that unintentionally prevented the most vulnerable people from receiving aid."

Bureaucracy: "The company's culture of departmental silos created a vitiogenic environment where cross-team projects were constantly delayed by conflicting and nonsensical internal procedures."
by zoverions October 13, 2025
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