Technology | Facebook Six Reasons Why I’m Not on Facebook Wired's UK editor on why he bucks the trend By Emily Rauhala Posted Sep 19, 2010 9:33 AM CDT Copied Um, no thanks. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle, file) David Rowan knows that shunning social networks will make him sound like an "old dude." But the UK editor of Wired is OK with 'old' if that means avoiding the social and political costs of our "ever-greater enmeshment" in proprietary networks. Here's what turns this techie off: People accidentally share too much: Go to youropenbook.org and search for phrases such as 'cheated on my wife,' advises Rowan. "I’ll bet that most of the people whose intimate details you’ll get to read are unaware that their updates are being shared quite so openly," he writes. "Have they genuinely given Zuckerberg their informed consent?" Maybe not. It makes it harder to reinvent yourself We all need space to change—privately. "If Robert Zimmerman, of small-town Hibbing, Minnesota, had had a Facebook profile, could he really have re-created himself as the New York beatnik Bob Dylan?" Doubtful. The lesson: The YouTube videos may come back to haunt you. Click here for the complete list. Read These Next CBS News boss pulls 60 Minutes segment critical of Trump policy. Kansas City Chiefs moving across state line. Trump makes a new move on Greenland, and Denmark isn't happy. Camera records 'dirty eruption' at Yellowstone National Park. Report an error