While it's not a widely used tag (it has 44 hits right now), jason (info) displays an impressive 10:1 mistake:correct usage ratio. As one can probably guess, it's slapped on various JSON-related questions for negligent reasons: its pronunciation sounds fine for those who don't know what JSON is, perhaps autocompletion as "jason" does precede "json" in alphabetical order, or whatever else.
Q&A from Criteria for Burnination:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Not at all. By its description, jason should refer to a specific JSON-parsing library for Elixir, but in reality 10 cases out of 11 will lead to Java, C#, PHP and Python questions when seeing this tag.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Well, probably yes.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Only could. Current usage clearly does not.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Well, yes, in common contexts it simply means a typo'd "JSON". For -at least some- Elixir folks it presumably means the given library of course, and searching for it as text shows that Jason is an actual (or implementation of a?) language for agent-oriented programming.
Added fun: I just noticed Delete [jason] tag from a year ago, concluding that it has legit uses and someone should create the tag wiki. But, it concluded that with the AI/agent-oriented usage in mind, citing two questions (1, 2) as legit usages. Now those two questions are retagged as JSON which they have nothing to do with, by experienced 89k and 683k users, the latter damaging the title too, that's how bad this tag is. It may be fit for multiple obscure use cases, but actually thrives as a typo in practice.