Disinfoboxes

A box aggressively attracts the marginally literate eye with apparent promises to contain a reductive summary of information; not all information can be so neatly contained. Like a bulleted list, or a timeline that substitutes for genuine history, it offers a competitive counter-article, stripped of nuance. As a substitute for accuracy and complexity, a box trumps all discourse.

Disinfoboxes are infobox templates that add no value to articles.

Infoboxes are strictly optional: no policy or guideline either requires or prohibits the inclusion of an infobox on any article.

Not every Wikipedia article requires an infobox. Yes, an infobox can be useful in certain articles, but many of them are just unnecessary repetitions of facts already presented in the article's lead—or worse, an oversimplified mass of disconnected facts devoid of context and nuance. The result: A Wikipedia infested with disinfoboxes that waste space and result in miscommunication, ambiguity, inaccuracy and redundancy.

Problems

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Disinfoboxes tend to be the product of overzealous editors interested in uniformity across the encyclopedia over the consideration of what best serves an individual article. These editors are not interested in evaluating the merit or potential usefulness of an infobox within a particular article but are rather interested in placing infoboxes en masse for their apparent professional visual appeal. The result is that these editors often add infoboxes to articles that they have not significantly contributed to or even necessarily accurately comprehended. This further compounds errors already inherent within an overly simplified method of communicating information. The result is that, rather than making Wikipedia appear more professional, the encyclopedia's reputation as an accurate and reliable source of information is damaged.

Here are some key red flags in identifying a disinfobox:

  1. If the infobox contains only information found in the lead, it is a disinfobox.
  2. If the infobox is longer than a third of the article's body, it is a disinfobox.
  3. If a biographical infobox contains only a photo, a person's occupation, and date and place of birth/death, it is a disinfobox.
  4. If the infobox contains multiple entries within any identifying field, it is probably a disinfobox.
  5. If the infobox contains subjective categories, it is a disinfobox.

Examples

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Example 1

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Ron Richardson
 
Born
Ronald E. Richardson
Occupation(s)Actor, baritone vocalist
Years active1970s-1994
AwardsDrama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play
1985 Big River

Ronald E. Richardson (January 27, 1952, Philadelphia – April 5, 1995 Bronxville) was an award-winning American actor and operatic baritone. Richardson began his career in the mid 1970s appearing in regional theater and opera productions. He appeared in several Broadway musicals from 1978 to 1993 with his best known role being his Tony Award and Drama Desk Award-winning performance of Jim in the 1985 Broadway musical Big River.

Analysis

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This is a former version of the infobox and lead in use at the article on actor Ron Richardson. As it stands this infobox is only a repetition of content found in the lead. The lead clearly provides Richardson's name, his place/date of birth/death, his occupation, his years of activity, and his awards. This is a classic example of an infobox merely providing redundant information that is already easily accessible to the reader. The infobox is therefore pointless and its removal would be preferable over a useless existence.

Furthermore, this infobox has a potential error in the "years active" section. In no place within the article and its listed sources does Richardson appear to have performed beyond 1993. That doesn't mean he didn't perform in 1994 but it does mean that a definitive year cannot be given. Yet the pressure to fill every criterion for the infobox is on. The user who added this infobox gave in to this pressure and simply decided to assume that since Richardson died in 1995 he must have stopped acting in 1994. This assumption may or may not be true. Furthermore, "1970s" is also either inaccurate or imprecise since Richardson was not performing professionally until the mid 1970s.

So once again we have a "disinfobox" that aggressively attracts the marginally literate eye with apparent promises to contain a reductive summary of information that can't be neatly contained. That promise however is false because the lead already provides a much more effective reductive summary. Like a bulleted list, or a time-line that substitutes for genuine history, this disinfobox offers a competitive counter-article, stripped of nuance that is a poor substitute for accuracy and complexity.


Example 2

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Laura Esterman
 
OccupationFilm actress

Laura Esterman is a New-York-born actress best known for portraying Ruby the Galactic Gumshoe in contemporary radio dramas and for her Drama Desk Award and Obie Award winning performance in the 1992 original stage production of Scott McPherson's Marvin's Room. Esterman made her Broadway debut in the 1969 revival of The Time of Your Life. Her other Broadway credits include The Waltz of the Toreadors, God's Favorite, Teibele and Her Demon, The Suicide, Metamorphosis and The Show Off.[1]

Esterman has also worked in television and film. Her television credits include Remington Steele, St. Elsewhere, The Facts of Life, L.A. Law, Family Ties, Law & Order, Third Watch and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit among others. Her movie credits include Alone in the Dark, Ironweed, Awakenings, The Doors, Addams Family Values, The Confession and Arranged among others.

Analysis

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This is an example from an early version of the article on actress Laura Esterman. In this case the infobox totally dwarfs the article since the actual article in its entirety is shown here. This article is obviously a stub, so the need for an infobox is absolutely zero. All information in a stub is easily found and analyzed, making the necessity for a reductive summary obsolete. Furthermore, this infobox is misleading since her career as a stage actress is much more prominent than her career working in television or film.


Example 3

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Ponte Vecchio
 
View of the Ponte Vecchio from above
Carriesvehicles and pedestrians?
CrossesArno River
LocaleFlorence, Italy
Characteristics
Designstone closed-spandrel segmental arch bridge
Longest span30 metres (98 ft)
History
Construction end< 996, 1117, 1345

Analysis

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This infobox appeared for several months at the article on the Ponte Vecchio bridge. In this case an editor has added information to the infobox that has obscured the accuracy of the information to the point that the box is now a source of misinformation. Problem one is the "Carries vehicles and pedestrians?" At one time the bridge carried vehicles but its use is now restricted to pedestrians only. The infobox attempted to address this issue but was unable to fit a nuanced and more detailed topic into its limited parameters. The result is that a reader could conclude that either Wikipedia doesn't know whether or not vehicles or pedestrians can use the bridge, or that there is some existing dispute as to whether or not pedestrians and vehicles can use the bridge, neither of which is true.

The second problem is the completion date of the bridge which shows three different dates. This is a classic example of where a list adds problems. The truth is that three different bridges were built on the same site. However, this truth is not clear in the infobox as a reader could easily be misled into thinking Ponte Vecchio is a rebuilding of a tenth-century bridge. This misinformation has the potential to snowball as other hobbyists without information will add it in a "timeline of bridges". This is irresponsible at Wikipedia, no matter how much hobbyists' energies are involved in creating boxed substitutes for nuanced history. Why? Because disinformation snowballs without informed correction. Competence is the issue here. This is a general problem, of which the Ponte Vecchio disinfobox is just one little incident example.

The revised version omits the "complete", "carries" and "width" fields and adds a locator map.


Example 4

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Mayfair
 
Grosvenor Square overlooking the Millennium Hotel London Mayfair
 
 
Mayfair
Location within Greater London
OS grid referenceTQ285805
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLONDON
Postcode districtW1K, W1J
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°30′32″N 0°08′51″W / 51.508755°N 0.14743°W / 51.508755; -0.14743

Analysis

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This infobox first appeared on Mayfair in March 2007 and is chock-full of what might appear to be useful information at first glance. It replaced what one can assume would be a serviceable infobox, Template:Infobox London place, that was deleted via a WP:TFD discussion around that time.

The principal problem with this infobox is the map is at far too low a resolution for a reader to sensibly work out where Mayfair actually is in Central London. Indeed, if one were to consider similar infoboxes on Hyde Park, St James and Soho, they would probably produce nearly identical maps; certainly too close to be practically distinguishable. This is because the infobox has been created for UK places generally, which normally runs at an acceptable resolution, but it doesn't scale appropriately to densely-populated areas such as Central London effectively. Therefore, this is a reasonable argument for having no information over useless information.

The image and location information is salvageable and can be put into other templates. The loss of the postcode (W1K and W1J) is perhaps unfortunate, but unless we can find a reliable source explaining why it's important (as, say, SW19 is to Wimbledon), then it's perhaps no great loss. The Police, Fire and Ambulance information was automatically added to the infobox, without anyone requesting it, and since it is no different to London generally, one has to wonder if the reader will feel frustrated not knowing which fire service to phone if somebody calls up a line of 25 sambucas in the The Punch Bowl, Mayfair and accidentally sets the whole lot, and the bar, alight. I'm not going to hold my breath, personally.

Solutions

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Some editors are of the opinion that all infoboxes are disinfoboxes because they are inherently redundant to the requirements already outlined in WP:MOSLEAD. For these editors, the only solution is to discontinue the use of infoboxes altogether and to remove infoboxes when WP:CONSENSUS opinion supports that decision. This is a perfectly valid point of view.

Another possible solution when facing a disinfobox is to try and save it by either correcting false information, removing all subjective fields, or adding useful information. However, saving a disinfobox can at times be impossible, particularly when all information that could feasibly go into an info box is already contained in the lead. When unnecessary redundancy and miscommunication is unavoidable the best thing to do is to simply remove the infobox. Of course if there is an image of value it can be used as a straightforward illustration.

A more pragmatic solution is to propose a new type of infobox. If you can't get an infobox to fit appropriately, don't try and force the square peg in the round hole. But do ask around to see if somebody can create a square hole for you instead.

See also

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Article- or project-specific discussions debating the inclusion of infoboxes

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Other essays

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Notes

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  1. ^ League, The Broadway (2017). "Laura Esterman – Broadway Cast & Staff | IBDB". www.ibdb.com.