These type primers rupture because the the primer cup was too hard when formed unto the cup leaving the curvature at the 90 degree bend brittle. And this can happen with any type and make primer, I had the same thing happen in 1974 with a bad brick of Remington primers, and Remington replaced the bolt and brick of primers.
Below is not the same problem, the primers were OK but the poster who took this photo said it was cheaper to replace his AR15 bolt than worry about loose primer pockets. Which in my opinion is pure stupidity for not inspecting his cases and showing little for the care of his rifle.
Kenny_G2
A good primer will "flow" into the eroded hole in the bolt face and not rupture, firing another bad primer may rupture at the hole in the bolt face and leak again. There are a lot of people with rifles that have high pressure erosion/pits in their bolt face and they keep shooting their rifles. The main point here is to make people aware that the ammunition manufactures are responsible for any damage done because of defective components. On the other hand the ammunition manufactures are not responsible for you overloading your cases and causing excessive chamber pressure and resulting damage. You may need to twist a few arms and fight your way through the company's dragging their feet but it their defective product that caused the problem.
I do not know the history of your pictured cartridge case and how many times it was reloaded and how tight the primer pocket was. BUT over resizing your cases/ excessive shoulder bump will cause excessive head clearance and thus cause the primer to back out of the primer pocket and stretch/flow further than normal. Simply meaning you need to find the cause before blaming anyone but yourself first for what happened on a reloaded cartridge.
I use pin gauges to inspect my primer pockets for the correct diameter corresponding to my primers diameter.
And with any case with a loose feeling primer pocket I use a Lee depriming tool to test the primer. If the primer can be pushed out with just finger pressure the case goes in the scrap brass bucket. As you can see once you have a damaged bolt face you will give a little more care and attention to your primers and cases.