"Helps developers build better apps and grow successful businesses" is marketing-speak with zero functionality description.
Compare to other firebase tags. Despite their marketing-speak I can still interpret something functional about the topic:
"Helps developers build better apps and grow successful businesses" is marketing-speak with zero functionality description.
Compare to other firebase tags. Despite their marketing-speak I can still interpret something functional about the topic:
This highlights a problem, but probably not the one you thought it might. Folks sometimes grab the "elevator pitch" right from the project site (usually word for word) and just paste it in. This happens for a few reasons:
Someone working on a project is asked by their marketing department to update copy in various places, and they don't realize that it smells a little bad.
Someone is looking to get some edits in, notices a blank info page for a tag being used, and just copies the elevator pitch from the project site word for word without attribution (rarely with) -- this is quite common.
Someone is working with us and pays to sponsor a tag and doesn't understand the info page is supposed to be in the community voice, not the company voice. This one is rare, because usually by the time a company is looking to sponsor a tag, the tag and wiki / info page / etc have long since been created organically.
If you see overly market-y double-speak-y buzzword-bingo-ish-y gobbledygook - just edit it if you can, or bring it here to meta if it smells off but you're not quite sure what to do with it. But, seldom is there actual malice at play, TylerH was hinting at this with his comment:
... just trying to provide a little insight into the potential reasoning, as programmers are also stereotypically bad with people and so they may not understand why marketers or businessfolk would make the choices they do.
It's usually just a case of not quite understanding the differences in voice, and where each kind of voice (or perspective) is appropriate.
If someone pushes back on an edit just remind them that while tags can be sponsored if the company chooses to do so, the voice of the info and wiki pages (e.g. the voice we want folks to hear as they read) is the voice of the SO community, not the company, which is why we only offer brand reinforcement visually through the logo on the tag.
When pointed out, it's usually a "Oh, duh, sorry about that!" sort of moment.