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user229044 Mod
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I tend to agree; in a case where the community has decided to pursue a mass-untagging/retagging, there must be a better way than spamming thousands of edits into the system.

The fact that that's our current course of action is ridiculous on the face of it. It's a huge waste of everybody's time, and allows somewhat shady users an extremely convenient and seemingly sanctioned way to game huge rep gains out of suggesting edits: First, we give them a huge target (thousands of questions needing trivial edits) and then we make it super easy to perform the minimum amount of editing possible. Edits that only remove a tag and address no other problems in the question are usually approved during tag burnination, when they should be rejected as too-minor in normal circumstances.

Moderators should petition the dev team for this ability, and then use it sparingly. I don't think we need to worry about the actual process of selecting which tags get burned (ie, "vote to burninate" buttons), the current meta process is fine, but once a burnination has been decided upon, virtually anything would be better than the current system.

There is an argument that this should be a manual process, where tags are removed and other problems are also addressed in the same edit. This isn't happening. We should cut out the middle man, stop letting users spam bad edits into the system, and just mass-untag via some moderator tool. A low-quality question was already a low-quality question, removing a meaningless tag isn't going to make it better or worse, but at least the job is done and we can move onto more important things.

I tend to agree; in a case where the community has decided to pursue a mass-untagging/retagging, there must be a better way than spamming thousands of edits into the system.

The fact that that's our current course of action is ridiculous on the face of it. It's a huge waste of everybody's time, and allows somewhat shady users an extremely convenient and seemingly sanctioned way to game huge rep gains out of suggesting edits: First, we give them a huge target (thousands of questions needing trivial edits) and then we make it super easy to perform the minimum amount of editing possible. Edits that only remove a tag and address no other problems in the question are usually approved during tag burnination, when they should be rejected as too-minor in normal circumstances.

Moderators should petition the dev team for this ability, and then use it sparingly. I don't think we need to worry about the actual process of selecting which tags get burned (ie, "vote to burninate" buttons), the current meta process is fine, but once a burnination has been decided upon, virtually anything would be better than the current system.

I tend to agree; in a case where the community has decided to pursue a mass-untagging/retagging, there must be a better way than spamming thousands of edits into the system.

The fact that that's our current course of action is ridiculous on the face of it. It's a huge waste of everybody's time, and allows somewhat shady users an extremely convenient and seemingly sanctioned way to game huge rep gains out of suggesting edits: First, we give them a huge target (thousands of questions needing trivial edits) and then we make it super easy to perform the minimum amount of editing possible. Edits that only remove a tag and address no other problems in the question are usually approved during tag burnination, when they should be rejected as too-minor in normal circumstances.

Moderators should petition the dev team for this ability, and then use it sparingly. I don't think we need to worry about the actual process of selecting which tags get burned (ie, "vote to burninate" buttons), the current meta process is fine, but once a burnination has been decided upon, virtually anything would be better than the current system.

There is an argument that this should be a manual process, where tags are removed and other problems are also addressed in the same edit. This isn't happening. We should cut out the middle man, stop letting users spam bad edits into the system, and just mass-untag via some moderator tool. A low-quality question was already a low-quality question, removing a meaningless tag isn't going to make it better or worse, but at least the job is done and we can move onto more important things.

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user229044 Mod
  • 238.6k
  • 21
  • 70
  • 83

I tend to agree; in a case where the community has decided to pursue a mass-untagging/retagging, there must be a better way than spamming thousands of edits into the system.

The fact that that's our current course of action is ridiculous on the face of it. It's a huge waste of everybody's time, and allows somewhat shady users an extremely convenient and seemingly sanctioned way to game huge rep gains out of suggesting edits: First, we give them a huge target (thousands of questions needing trivial edits) and then we make it super easy to perform the minimum amount of editing possible. Edits that only remove a tag and address no other problems in the question are usually approved during tag burnination, when they should be rejected as too-minor in normal circumstances.

Moderators should petition the dev team for this ability, and then use it sparingly. I don't think we need to worry about the actual process of selecting which tags get burned (ie, "vote to burninate" buttons), the current meta process is fine, but once a burnination has been decided upon, virtually anything would be better than the current system.