According to Wikipedia, the 'original' OpenSearch was created in 2005:
OpenSearch is a collection of technologies that allow the publishing of search results in a format suitable for syndication and aggregation. Introduced in 2005, it is a way for websites and search engines to publish search results in a standard and accessible format.
However, it also is the name recently given to the Amazon fork of Elasticsearch. The GitHub project page for that can be found here and general website https://opensearch.org/. I assume it has more to do with trademarks or copyright since, as Amazon already owned them, it was free to use it for whatever, even if it meant redefining what 'OpenSearch' was.
While I am unsure of how much the 'original' OpenSearch gained traction, there is evidence that it is still getting legitimate questions asked as recently as last month (Setting keyword entry in opensearch.xml). Of the 94 questions are tagged with opensearch, it appears all but four are for the original and are somewhat evenly spread from 2013 to 2020. With such a big name fork, and the popularity of the elasticsearch tag (~51K at the time of this writing), I would expect that the OpenSearch tag will significantly ramp up here, but more in the 'new' use of OpenSearch.
I am unsure if the community needs to take any action, or just let the ambiguity exist. I can't easily think of what to rename the original OpenSearch tag to that wouldn't still be possibly confused with the new one. The topics are pretty disparate, so users should be able to tell, but I find the tagging system to be useful and in general it seems like the disparate topics in the same tag are undesirable. I wasn't able to find any precedent in the meta for an approach, but that may just be that I wasn't aware of a prior example and it was difficult to find. Most of the ambiguities in tag-disambiguation
are examples of very generic names (or a category of thing) or two things that actually have different specific names getting lumped together. In this case, we have two things that actually have the same specific name with different implementations.