In part because of the recent controversy about downvoting questions for Roomba, @Shog9, myself, and others had a long conversation attempting to address the real problem: what are the goals of tag burnination?
The main reason to get rid of a tag is to prevent users from asking questions about that topic, because the tag lends itself to asking bad questions (really broad tags -> too broad, off topic tags -> off topic), etc.
Therefore, I propose that we make it easier to lock bad tags down from having new questions added (both by "Ask Question" and by "Edit"), once the community has approved the cleanup of the tag on Meta Stack Overflow. This will:
- Solve the problem of bad tags leading to misuse of the site
- Make it unnecessary to use downvotes to clean up crappy questions, because higher reputation users will not need to completely burn tags quite so quickly.
Then, once cleanup in a tag has been achieved (good questions edited / retagged), we can simply flag for moderator attention to finish off the process.
I don't yet have a specific proposal for the details of how this might occur, not knowing exactly what powers are available to CMs already and not knowing how much of a code change this might be, but I wanted to get the ball rolling discussing this topic.
I am also looking for input on whether this "tag locking down" should ultimately terminate in a blacklisted tag in the traditional sense, or whether the tag should be unlocked once the burnination is complete. Personally, I think that if a tag gets burninated with moderator / staff involvement, then there's no reason for it not to be blacklisted then and there. But, perhaps there are reasons I am not aware of.