You hate clocks. They're a reminder of how life just passes you by and how doom is inevitable. You pretend you have control over your house by destroying every clock in it, but if it were fate, none of them stay destroyed, and their offspring fill the cracks in with what was missing. You kill one clock, and 3 come back.
You also hate wasting your time on useless applications on your phone. You're a pure-blooded Threditer. And part of the Threditer vow that was arbitrarily cultivated, you are a staunch opponent to social media apps like drip drop. Drip Drop is a social media application produced by the rival to WDG Industries, Tiananmen^2. Which is one of the only electronics companies that doesn't have anything to do with WDG. Most other companies that are 3rd parties integrate the IV technologies into their own technology, but Tiananmen^2 uses it's own system.
Tiananmen^2 is popular in China for being created there, and it's popularity dwindles the further away it is from China. Well, except India. In order to combat the perceived western-ness of WDG, India teamed up with Tiananmen^2 to use it across the entire country. Now, WDG products is used by many Indian and Chinese people, but their governments basically require the use of Tiananmen^2.
Drip Drop is a sensation for young people all around the globe. Its main service is short form everything. There's comedy, drama, tutorials, everything. The main appeal is that you can use it to learn about things in the world that you wouldn't otherwise. But there's a sense that you learn a bit too much, and some of the stuff isn't true, and that it's rotting your brain, one drop at a time. That's why you don't like it, because it leaves your brain in wrought.