Never a good sign. If it is more than one stick run the test again on each stick individually to determine which one is bad.
Also double check that the ram is running at the correct specs (voltage and timings) by comparing what is shown in the bios against the manufacturer's specs. If the sticker with the model number isn't readable this (main site for it is overloaded at the moment),
should be able to tell you the model number (and the recommended timings, etc).
If after all that and it is still getting the errors you can try bumping the voltage (vdimm) by one notch in the bios and see if that helps get rid of it. If all that still fails then it is time to see what if any warranty the ram has and either looking at getting it RMA'ed, or replacing it with a new stick.
Don't forget to try each stick individually, as Stormy has suggested. In addition, try each stick in each memory slot. Although unlikely, we cannot rule out a fault here.
4 x 4GB DDR3-1600 Corsair Vengeance CMZ8GX3M2A1600C9B (16GB)
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GeForce GTX770 Gaming OC 2GB
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition on board solution (ALC 898)
Monitor(s) Displays
ViewSonic VA1912w Widescreen (VGA)
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Hard Drives
OCZ Agility 3 SSD 120GB SATA III x2 (RAID 0)
Samsung HD501LJ 500GB SATA II x2
Hitachi HDS721010CLA332 1TB SATA II
Iomega 1.5TB Ext USB 2.0
WD 2.0TB Ext USB 3.0
Don't forget to try each stick individually, as Stormy has suggested. In addition, try each stick in each memory slot. Although unlikely, we cannot rule out a fault here.
when i try each stick in each memory slot
and used them both there was no errors
thanks for helping thankkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkx
and big thank for Stormy and carltr9