Notorious in a sentence as an adjective

Qatar, like Dubai, is notorious for its treatment of migrant construction labor.

Reddit is already notorious for its annoying and dangerous group think.

* Semmelweis himself was, apparently long before he lost his post, a notorious *******.

Jobs was notorious for taking public, absolutist positions and later changing his mind.

Google is notorious for providing horrible customer support, so why some people get personalized help, while the rest of us are stuck with the uncaring robots?

Microsoft is notorious for generating tons of internal e-mail.

This problem is particularly notorious in subjects like quantum mechanics.

Sit by while people now start making invidious comparisons of their activities with, say, the increasingly notorious Groupon venture?

* Formed political alliances with leaders such as Yeddyurappa who has many cases of corruption pending and parties such as Shiv Sena who are notorious for using violence to target ethnic groups.

Just like alcohol prohibition created some of the most notorious American criminals, South American drug prohibitions produce powerful criminals down there.

[In evaluating whether I've been accurate with the above description, you might consider it useful to note that I'm a Japan-based entrepreneur with a fair bit of understanding about Bitcoin technically and systemically, and that I'm an open and notorious critic of it.

Yelp is notorious for a corrupt and indeed outright criminal aggregating principle -- "we'll suppress bad reviews if you pay us and good reviews if you don't" -- but the same is true for any aggregator, whether they're aggregating based on good principles or bad, because aggregation is a form of authorship.

Notorious definitions

adjective

known widely and usually unfavorably; "a notorious gangster"; "the tenderloin district was notorious for vice"; "the infamous Benedict Arnold";

See also: ill-famed infamous