If any single PC component is a non-trivial cost, that person should be spending more time on other areas of their life than PC gaming.
I've built dozens of desktops. Misapplied thermal paste, PC shuts down. Re-apply paste, works for years. Never used a static strap. They all worked for years. The only problems I can recall having are mechanical disk failure, one video card going POOF randomly. Most issues were software related.
Talk about people that don't read enough outside of tech topics.
They have the same issues, but a different historical context for treating them.
In America, the first nation to be founded on a set of utilitarian guidelines, rather than random edict of a mad man claiming divine right, situations are codified in law
As the industrial changes of the last 100 years lead to exploitation, laws sprang up and needed tweaking.
I'm not saying it's perfect, but let me explain WHY these laws still exist and don't seem to change: because the public doesn't force the issue.
They think they can go to their job and change things, then realize every 50 years or so that really not much did, because the social order codified in law didn't change.
Google and Facebook aren't changing things; they're inventing new gadgets and bullshit. Change in human societies has ALWAYS come from the top-down administrative changes.
My guess is you're in a bit of an echo chamber if you're hearing a lot of "Delete Facebook" rhetoric.
There's been no change in Google trends for "delete Facebook" and similar.
I suspect people will stop caring about Facebook in this context. It's handy, but not held in the same regard socially as a bank or government. Those things impact multiple generations. Facebook will, at best, impact a couple generations.
Person A: "NO!"
Person B: "YES!"
Someone owns a jingle from 1960 or whatever, they are gonna milk that forever. External effects be damned. They are fucking OWED for LIFE.