"Only silver badges and higher in the corresponding tag can write/edit documentation."
This won't work for relatively low-traffic tags. Tags that have enough traffic on here to get documented, (At least 500 questions and 5 committed users.) (sourcesource) don't necessarily have any silver badge holders.
Even if there's one, you can't expect that single person to maintain the topic.
This could be an argument against documenting said tag, but then the question would be: When do we document a tag? When it has 4 silver badge owners? 5?
What if someone that works for <tag>
registers? He couldn't contribute to the tag's documentation for quite some time.
Besides, I'm sure you've seen gold badge owners write gibberish. I know I have.
"Only gold badges and higher can approve documentation/edits. If gold badges differ, it goes by what side gets more gold badges to vote."
Same argument as above. This could work for high-volume tags, but not for smaller tags. Besides, why can you edit at silver, but approve only when you get gold? On Stack Overflow, the review queue, and review-less edit privileges are both grantedgranted at 2k rep.
"No rep. Instead, your username gets listed as a contributor to that page, if your change is accepted."
On large tags, your username will be drowned out in a massive list of names, removing all incentive to contribute, other than pure altruism. While this isn't necessarily "bad", this will result in even less activity in documentation than there already is.
"Gold users can accept changes as either minor (not added to list of contributors, used for spelling mistakes and copy editing) or substantial (for anything that fixes bugs, adds code or explanations. Added to list of contributors)."
This has quite some potential for abuse. I'd prefer the "Major/Minor" algorithm to be changed to count characters changed, instead of a "length" difference.
"On a user's main and jobs profile, you can see a list of pages he's a contributor to."
That's already accessible on your profileon your profile.
The point of documentation is that, while anyone can edit it, there is enough incentive / functionality available to improve / correct mistakes.
In the first few weeks, documented tags were a massive load of gibberish. While it's still far from perfect, the community did patch up most of the content. I doubt we'd have gotten this level of quality (cough) with the suggested rules in place, simply due to lack of activity.