That people get away with making minuscule edits, and others gain unwanted rep from editing them out again, is a sign of a broken system.
It's got nothing to do with the occasional use of the kbd tag, though. You're just piggybacking on the general indignation about Documentation here.
The occasional use of kbd is incorrect, but it doesn't seem like such a huge deal that requires repeated meta posts, flagging people, reverting edits, and such.
So it's not semantically correct. Boo hoo. So what? Show me an actual, real-world problem caused by this. It's not like it's impeding the readability of a contribution, like other stylistic no-nos (like showing code in an image). You could argue it improves readability (which would be a case for styling links differently, though, of course, and not an excuse for using <kbd>
).
Take people overusing backticks
for things they're not meant to use, which seems much more widespread.
If they do it all the time, in every sentence, then yes, we tell them to stop. If it makes the text super annoying to read, we edit it out. If it's silly and wrong but essentially harmless, not editing it is totally an option.
If they edit it into other people's posts to gain rep, flag them with prejudice and hope a moderator will hammer them.
Otherwise, I don't see the problem.
Is this:
Live Demo on JSBin
really worth getting worked up about and editing out?
I don't think so.