Coal mining (if coal hadn't ever been mined, we'd probably have gotten large scale wind- and hydroelectric power much sooner).
Whitney's cotton gin, albeit due to it coming before automated cotton picking.
The automobile revolutionized transportation, but also came with licensing requirements. (And more recently, we are finding to be responsible for a health and climate catastrophe, necessitating new restrictions on fuel economy, leaded gasoline, ICEs, etc.) You didn't need a license to walk or ride a bicycle, or ride a horse, but when we started putting people behind thousands of pounds of steel, all of a sudden we needed to come up with a myriad of new rules and restrictions on how automobiles could be used.
The printing press came with copyright laws. New and more destructive weapons and tools and chemicals came with more restrictions regarding their possession and expected use. The telephone and the computer combined allow robo calling and spam on an industrial level, and those particular uses of those new technologies are forbidden. Radio revolutionized communication, but we don't just let any random asshole blast static into the spectrum. We have narrowly curtailed, permitted and forbidden uses of it.
It would be far easier to name the technologies that net-benefited society, and did not need new rules around them, to prevent their destructive and damaging uses.
This one isn't looking to be one of them.