The Jargon File (version 4.4.7, 29 Dec 2003):
evil and rude
adj.
Both evil and rude, but with the additional connotation that the
rudeness was due to malice rather than incompetence. Thus, for example:
Microsoft's Windows NT is evil because it's a competent implementation of a
bad design; it's rude because it's gratuitously incompatible with Unix in
places where compatibility would have been as easy and effective to do; but
it's evil and rude because the incompatibilities are apparently there not
to fix design bugs in Unix but rather to lock hapless customers and
developers into the Microsoft way. Hackish evil and rude is close to the
mainstream sense of ?evil?.