Ideas:
the idea of software bugs and data integrity, in Episode 2, this can be looked at as the missing planet. This is when Obi-Wan (34:04) relies on the archives to locate where Kamino is, and then the librarian's over-trust in automated systems gets the best of her when she states, "If an item does not appear in our records, it does not exist." This highlights a classic reliability pitfall: assuming the software is the "single source of truth." The fact that anyone could delete information in this case, Count Dooku without leaving any trace shows significant lack of fault tolerance in the Jedi network architecture.
Another idea I had was about hardware failures and signal degradation, looking at the incident at Genonosis. 1:21:44, Obi-Wan's transmitter got damaged pretty badly and wasn't working right. This is a great example of partial system failure. The computer didn't stop working entirely, but its output was degraded in high-reliability systems. Because the direct link to Coruscant failed, Obi-Wan had to use Anakin's ship as a relay station. This mirrors how real-world networks or satellite relays ensure communication reliability even when primary hardware is compromised