Would using fake "Honeypot" tags to warn/inform the user when added improve question quality?
As an example of how I see this working: create an expert-advice-needed tag (and others) available when asking a new question. This "Tag" would not exist truly exist (no tag pages, question lists, tag wiki, or anything else), but it would have a tag description and plus some fake numbers. It would only be available for adding to new questions, perhaps only for low-rep or new users. They could behave like review audits really.
For new users, such tags would look pretty real, and when a user adds a fake tag like homework or expert-advice-needed, it can trigger a message or a page explaining what to keep in mind when asking homework questions, or why expert-advice-needed should not be asked, and so on for other such tags.
If someone adds the expert-advice-needed tag to their question, the next confirmation page (which all new users get after asking a question, IIRC) could show something like this:
The question you are asking seems to be Primarily opinion based. Such questions should not be asked on Stack Overflow, and your question may be downvoted, closed or deleted.
(...)
I think that doing something like this would filter out at least some off-topic questions before they're even posted, and this would raise question quality. Data collected through this could also be used to improve automated decisions on what goes into triage and other review queues.
These "fake" tags, would also be removed from the question before being posted, obviously.
My questions:
Is this a good idea, and would it have any effect?
What downsides would there be, and would the benefits outweigh the downsides?
Would SE implement something like this?