I just came across this great interview with Edward Tufte from 2011. I love his description of bad information design, and how it’s not the data’s fault:
Overload, clutter, and confusion are not attributes of information, they are failures of design. So if something is cluttered, fix your design, don’t throw out information. If something is confusing, don’t blame your victim — the audience — instead, fix the design. And if the numbers are boring, get better numbers. Chartoons can’t add interest, which is a content property. Chartoons are disinformation design, designed to distract rather than inform. Thus they reduce the credibility of your presentation. To distract, hire a magician instead of a chartoonist, for magicians are honest liars.
Chartoons. Heh.
Anyway, I find this particularly poignant in our current infographic age, where Mashable recently posted — without irony — an infographic on infographics. Here are some of my other favorite infographic takedowns:
- Ending the Infographic Plague (The Atlantic)
- Data Art vs. Data Visualization: Why Does a Distinction Matter? (Stephen Few)
- How Infographics Are Ruining The Web (SplatF)
(link via @ericatjader)