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This page in a nutshell: Not every article needs an infobox. Do not add one if it does not provide any value to the article. If there is one, make sure it isn't an oversimplified mass of disconnected facts devoid of context and nuance. |
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.