No, they're actually a good idea. If there's a problem with your specific triggers, then you're not doing them right, but that usually means there's a problem with your implementation, not the concept of triggers themselves :-).
We use triggers a great deal because it places the DBMS-specific activity under the control of the database where it belongs. Users of a DBMS should not have to worry about that sort of stuff. The integrity of data lies with the database itself, not the applications or users that use it. Without constraints and triggers and other features in the database, it's left to the applications to enforce the rules and it only takes one rogue or buggy application/user to destroy the data.
For example, without triggers, such wondrous things as auto-generated columns wouldn't exist and you'd have to process a function on each row when selecting them. That's likely to kill DBMS performance, far better to create the auto-generated column at insert/update time since that's the only time it changes.
Also, lack of triggers would prevent data rules from being enforced at the DBMS such as pre-triggers to ensure columns have a specific format. Note that this is different from data integrity rules which are generally just foreign key look ups.