Hot answers tagged tag-blacklist
20
I'm putting this in an answer so I don't make a ridiculously long comment.
With regards to the other question, this part of the feature request was definitely [status-declined], but Jeff put [status-completed] on the question because they have a back-end sort of tool for it.
Regardless of my comment on Jeff's answer, I've mostly come around to his thinking ...
16
Anything that helps avoid problems with windows-forms vs winforms, and the regular plzsendtehcodez etc... ;-p
Of course, for the first example, tag aliasing would be preferable. But the second is just noise and could be blocked.
14
So, there's a couple reasons why this is locked down to devs instead of being open to moderators:
Blacklisting a tag shouldn't be something that happens often. It's a last-ditch hurdle to put in front of users.
Blacklist a tag can have very dangerous consequences if entered incorrectly.
If a tag really does need to be blacklisted, then moderators can ...
10
Kinda surprised to see this revived...
Blacklisting is rare. Not because it's hard to do, but because it's... Kinda useless.
Blacklisting homework doesn't stop folks from asking homework questions. Blacklisting subjective doesn't stop folks from asking questions that aren't constructive. Blacklisting careers doesn't stop folks from asking questions about ...
9
It was a bad idea to get rid of the best-practices. It is exactly the tag that should be applied to best-practice posts. So, for example; if someone wants to get best practices for embedding youtube code, then they can search on youtube and best-practices.
Related Post: Why is the best-practices tag not allowed on SO any more?
8
We are planning to add logic that looks at the tags on a question as it is migrated.
If any of the tags do not exist on the destination site, they will be deleted from the question during migration.
If none of the tags exist on the destination site, the question will be closed as off-topic on the original site and will not be migrated.
This will ...
7
We do have a blacklist, to be clear -- it's something the dev team has to enter because it's so dangerous to get wrong.
We work with the existing site moderators to determine what's bad enough to be blacklisted. It has to be quite bad.
And yes we are still planning to implement tag synonym remapping.
3
"newbie" is rather pejorative.
I tend to use the word "beginner" instead. But that is still subjective and not really relevant: if you really are a beginner, people will notice and those who don't probably can't help you anyway.
And since you're asking why the c++newbie is forbidden as well. If c++newbie is allowed, so must be perlexpert, pythonmaster and ...
3
newbie has no real semantic meaning as a tag. It doesn't add value to the question and doesn't help people locating it and/or answering it.
Ask yourself why you want to tag newbie. Is it because the question is very easy? No matter, as long as it's not a dupe, even an easy question is perfectly valid on SO - just make sure to tag it properly. Is it because ...
3
I agree this would be nice feature and I look forward to it.
Over the last day, I went through Super User and removed all the "belongs-on-stackoverflow", "belongs-on-serverfault", "belongs-on-meta", "belongs-on-superuser", etc. They are obviously found on migrated questions most of the time.
A black list would prevent this from ever having to be done ...
3
It's a very bad user experience if a tag remains on a question after it has been blacklisted - the next editor will see his edit fail unless he proactively removes it.
"Burnination" is slang for "tag deletion" - it simply involves removing all occurrences of a tag from all questions on the site. Users can do this by editing, and developers can do it by ...
2
The StackExchange Developer Staff are the only ones who have the ability to blacklist tags. That's why you have to post a [tag-blacklist-request] here.
Tags are typically blacklisted when wide consensus is reached that the tag is bad, and the tag keeps reappearing on the site, despite repeated attempts to obliterate it.
See this blog post for a detailed ...
2
Seeing as it's already [status-planned] with no idea on [status-completed], we wait.
But on Super User, Troggy has been cleaning up so many of these improperly tagged questions. And it's not like the issue/behaviour is going away.
It would be nice to put the fear of being jerks into those who tag as such:
If you're going to retag this question as any ...
2
The tag blacklist needs to have another column to hold the tag that the bad one should be replaced with.
Then, when someone submits a question with a bad tag, it can be replaced with a message, "The tag [badtag] is invalid and was replaced with [goodtag]."
It could also show up in the tag hints as the user types, because by the time they've typed "vs" ...
1
In addition to Hans' excellent answer, you'd be surprised how often "simple" questions aren't simple, and "hard" questions aren't "hard". The fact that you feel like your relative newness to a topic impacts your question isn't really at issue. Its amazing how many "seasoned professionals" have similar questions...
1
If it is ever going to come, please add [in] to it as well, next to what @tvanfosson already suggested before.
The only appropriate use is [in-clause]. I get tired of retagging/fixing them. No, it is no candidate for tag synonyms. The in can have an entirely different meaning.
1
The process we follow on Programmers:
Cleaning up a tag
We post a Meta question on whether the tag is useful or not. If consensus is reached that the tag is useless, we either clean it up manually or, if it's on a lot of questions, we ask someone from SE to burninate it.
Blacklisting a tag
If a tag that was previously cleaned up appears again, even ...
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