I am going to give a very opinionated answer, and you all can agree or disagree with votes.
IMO, "DO NOT USE" is there to solve a problem in our tag system, yet it does not practically solve anything.
As I see it, the purpose of the tags is to make questions discoverable. Experts are supposed to favorite the tags on their area of expertise, and they will get to discover the tagged questions and answer them. Can you tell me any other important use of the tagging system? (They will be useful for search engines, but that is discoverability again)
When a tag is marked "DO NOT USE", it is probably because the tag is too broad or vague that you cannot tell the nature of the questions by looking at the tags. The tag is useless, and no expert would favorite it.
Some may argue that the users should read the tag wiki before they tag it. While this is true, I don't see it as the core problem. The core problem is we have let our tag collection to grow without control.
If the system does not enforce the DO NOT USE flag, it is practically useless as well. So if I answer the question my answer would be: "DO NOT USE" serves no practical purpose.
Today, when I open the tags tab in homepage, I see a 9 x 4 matrix which has 1117 pages. That's 40000+ tags. And can someone tell me how many tags have 0 or 1 followers? (examples: iota (1), appxmanifest (0), fluenthtml (1), and many more). I have no means of finding out all of them, but I am sure that would be quite large.
In my opinion, a tag is a micro version of a Stack Exchange site. It gathers a community of enthusiasts (who want to ask questions) and experts (who want to answer) around it.
Now we don't let any site to graduate as a Stack Exchange site (or even a beta site), do we? We have a very controlled process for that, ensuring the site has enough community support. I believe that tags should also be subject to such a screening, but that need not to be as rigid as the process for a SE site.