Technology | Facebook How to Break With Facebook But before deleting account, consider lesser steps By John Johnson Posted Nov 3, 2010 5:32 PM CDT Copied Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg speaks in the Galileo Auditorium on Microsoft’s Silicon Valley Campus in Mountain View, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu) Annoyed with Facebook or, more precisely, with everyone in your Facebook orbit? Chris Gaylord offers a primer on various ways to make the pain go away, up to and including the "nuclear option" of deleting your account. Gaylord offers step-by-step instructions in the Christian Science Monitor on how to: Deactivate temporarily: Your profile info, photos, etc., are all saved but hidden from users. You can sign back in at any time to restore the account. Think of it as a trial separation. Shield pests: Sure, you can delete annoying people from your friends list, but you can also take the less awkward steps of hiding their status updates so you never see them—or hiding yours from them. Privacy worries: If this is your beef, it's easy to request all the stuff Facebook has collected on you, and it arrives in a "single, giant Zip file." Go nuclear: It's also "pretty easy" to delete your account, and Gaylord explains how to find the link under the Help button. For more. click here. Read These Next Trump tells Washington's homeless to clear out. Analysis sees a historic shift underway in US capitalism. Explosion rocks steel plant near Pittsburgh. Jamie Lee Curtis is definitely no fan of this Freakier Friday review. Report an error