Probably sarcasm, but...
It's not so much a problem with the lens as the way light interacts with digital sensors, with film light could hit the surface at a 45° angle and still register detail with no color shifts, but now with sensor pixels and their narrow light-sensitive wells, an acute angle of incidence will cause purple/magenta/green/blue all over the place and it looks even worse than vignetting.
You'll never notice this with DSLRs because every lens has to "throw" the image circle past the mirror box, but in cameras where the lens can potentially press right up against the sensor surface you either need LCC correction or the lens needs to be a retro-focus design, substantially increasing it's weight, size, price, complexity and potentially reducing sharpness. Though, with especially large sensors and extreme lens shifts/tilts, a retro-focus lens needs to be used anyway.