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The criteria for burnination in the FAQ post are unacceptably poor.

They state,

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
 

A tag must fail all of these tests in order to be considered for burnination

Consider these points:

  • Q4 is a subset of Q1. A tag that means different things in different contexts is ambiguous.
  • Q2 alone is reason enough to burn a tag. Off topic tags have no place here.
  • You may not be able to evaluate Q2 if it fails Q1. Some meanings might be on topic while others are not.
  • Q3 can be argued to be "yes" for literally any tag because communicating information is what words do. Just because the word conveys information doesn't mean it's a good tag. In particular, users often argue a tag has meaning in context, but this necessarily means it fails Q1 (is ambiguous on its own).

Furthermore, Shog's source post clearly states it's his personal list, not strict rules for the process. Omitting the additional explanation from the original makes them even worse. And that post certainly does not require a tag to strictly meet all the criteria. It's focus is entirely on practical considerations when you read down into the details, not strict adherence to a set of rules. They are only guidelines for evaluating whether burning a tag is a productive endeavor.

As written in the FAQ, the burnination criteria are a jumbled mess of self contradictory requirements that can be easily abused to argue against burnination in nearly all cases. We must improve this situation. How can the guidance be reworked to convey the original intentions without being actively harmful? Just expanding on what's there is insufficient. They need to be totally rewritten.

The criteria for burnination in the FAQ post are unacceptably poor.

They state,

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
 

A tag must fail all of these tests in order to be considered for burnination

Consider these points:

  • Q4 is a subset of Q1. A tag that means different things in different contexts is ambiguous.
  • Q2 alone is reason enough to burn a tag. Off topic tags have no place here.
  • You may not be able to evaluate Q2 if it fails Q1. Some meanings might be on topic while others are not.
  • Q3 can be argued to be "yes" for literally any tag because communicating information is what words do. Just because the word conveys information doesn't mean it's a good tag. In particular, users often argue a tag has meaning in context, but this necessarily means it fails Q1 (is ambiguous on its own).

Furthermore, Shog's source post clearly states it's his personal list, not strict rules for the process. Omitting the additional explanation from the original makes them even worse. And that post certainly does not require a tag to strictly meet all the criteria. It's focus is entirely on practical considerations when you read down into the details, not strict adherence to a set of rules. They are only guidelines for evaluating whether burning a tag is a productive endeavor.

As written in the FAQ, the burnination criteria are a jumbled mess of self contradictory requirements that can be easily abused to argue against burnination in nearly all cases. We must improve this situation. How can the guidance be reworked to convey the original intentions without being actively harmful? Just expanding on what's there is insufficient. They need to be totally rewritten.

The criteria for burnination in the FAQ post are unacceptably poor.

They state,

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

A tag must fail all of these tests in order to be considered for burnination

Consider these points:

  • Q4 is a subset of Q1. A tag that means different things in different contexts is ambiguous.
  • Q2 alone is reason enough to burn a tag. Off topic tags have no place here.
  • You may not be able to evaluate Q2 if it fails Q1. Some meanings might be on topic while others are not.
  • Q3 can be argued to be "yes" for literally any tag because communicating information is what words do. Just because the word conveys information doesn't mean it's a good tag. In particular, users often argue a tag has meaning in context, but this necessarily means it fails Q1 (is ambiguous on its own).

Furthermore, Shog's source post clearly states it's his personal list, not strict rules for the process. Omitting the additional explanation from the original makes them even worse. And that post certainly does not require a tag to strictly meet all the criteria. It's focus is entirely on practical considerations when you read down into the details, not strict adherence to a set of rules. They are only guidelines for evaluating whether burning a tag is a productive endeavor.

As written in the FAQ, the burnination criteria are a jumbled mess of self contradictory requirements that can be easily abused to argue against burnination in nearly all cases. We must improve this situation. How can the guidance be reworked to convey the original intentions without being actively harmful? Just expanding on what's there is insufficient. They need to be totally rewritten.

Fixed typos; changed 'facts' to 'points as the bullet points are making persuasive arguments, not pointing out objective facts
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TylerH
  • 21.2k
  • 22
  • 229
  • 328

The burinationburnination criteria need a complete rework

The criteria for burnination in the FAQ post are unacceptably poor.

They state,

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

A tag must fail all of these tests in order to be considered for burnination

Consider these factspoints:

  • Q4 is a subset of Q1. A tag that means different things in different contexts is ambiguous.
  • Q2 alone is reason enough to burn a tag. Off topic tags have no place here.
  • You may not be able to evaluate Q2 if it fails Q1. Some meanings might be on topic while others are not.
  • Q3 can be argued to be "yes" for literally any tag because communicating information is what words do. Just because the word conveys information doesn't mean it's a good tag. In particular, users often argue a tag has meaning in context, but this necessarily means it fails Q1 (is ambiguous on its own).

Furthermore, Shog's source post clearly states it's his personal list, not strict rules for the process. Omitting the additional explanation from the original makes them even worse. And that post certainly does not require a tag to strictly meet all the criteria. It's focus is entirely on practical considerations when you read down into the details, not strict adherence to a set of rules. They are only guidelines for evaluating whether burning a tag is a productive endeavor.

As written in the FAQ, the burinationburnination criteria are a jumbled mess of self contradictory requirements that can be easily abused to argue against burnination in nearly all cases. We must improve this situation. How can the guidance be reworked to convey the original intentions without being actively harmful? Just expanding on what's there is insufficient. They need to be totally rewritten.

The burination criteria need a complete rework

The criteria for burnination in the FAQ post are unacceptably poor.

They state,

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

A tag must fail all of these tests in order to be considered for burnination

Consider these facts:

  • Q4 is a subset of Q1. A tag that means different things in different contexts is ambiguous.
  • Q2 alone is reason enough to burn a tag. Off topic tags have no place here.
  • You may not be able to evaluate Q2 if it fails Q1. Some meanings might be on topic while others are not.
  • Q3 can be argued to be "yes" for literally any tag because communicating information is what words do. Just because the word conveys information doesn't mean it's a good tag. In particular, users often argue a tag has meaning in context, but this necessarily means it fails Q1 (is ambiguous on its own).

Furthermore, Shog's source post clearly states it's his personal list, not strict rules for the process. Omitting the additional explanation from the original makes them even worse. And that post certainly does not require a tag to strictly meet all the criteria. It's focus is entirely on practical considerations when you read down into the details, not strict adherence to a set of rules. They are only guidelines for evaluating whether burning a tag is a productive endeavor.

As written in the FAQ, the burination criteria are a jumbled mess of self contradictory requirements that can be easily abused to argue against burnination in nearly all cases. We must improve this situation. How can the guidance be reworked to convey the original intentions without being actively harmful? Just expanding on what's there is insufficient. They need to be totally rewritten.

The burnination criteria need a complete rework

The criteria for burnination in the FAQ post are unacceptably poor.

They state,

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

A tag must fail all of these tests in order to be considered for burnination

Consider these points:

  • Q4 is a subset of Q1. A tag that means different things in different contexts is ambiguous.
  • Q2 alone is reason enough to burn a tag. Off topic tags have no place here.
  • You may not be able to evaluate Q2 if it fails Q1. Some meanings might be on topic while others are not.
  • Q3 can be argued to be "yes" for literally any tag because communicating information is what words do. Just because the word conveys information doesn't mean it's a good tag. In particular, users often argue a tag has meaning in context, but this necessarily means it fails Q1 (is ambiguous on its own).

Furthermore, Shog's source post clearly states it's his personal list, not strict rules for the process. Omitting the additional explanation from the original makes them even worse. And that post certainly does not require a tag to strictly meet all the criteria. It's focus is entirely on practical considerations when you read down into the details, not strict adherence to a set of rules. They are only guidelines for evaluating whether burning a tag is a productive endeavor.

As written in the FAQ, the burnination criteria are a jumbled mess of self contradictory requirements that can be easily abused to argue against burnination in nearly all cases. We must improve this situation. How can the guidance be reworked to convey the original intentions without being actively harmful? Just expanding on what's there is insufficient. They need to be totally rewritten.

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jpmc26
  • 29.8k
  • 8
  • 78
  • 118

The burination criteria need a complete rework

The criteria for burnination in the FAQ post are unacceptably poor.

They state,

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

A tag must fail all of these tests in order to be considered for burnination

Consider these facts:

  • Q4 is a subset of Q1. A tag that means different things in different contexts is ambiguous.
  • Q2 alone is reason enough to burn a tag. Off topic tags have no place here.
  • You may not be able to evaluate Q2 if it fails Q1. Some meanings might be on topic while others are not.
  • Q3 can be argued to be "yes" for literally any tag because communicating information is what words do. Just because the word conveys information doesn't mean it's a good tag. In particular, users often argue a tag has meaning in context, but this necessarily means it fails Q1 (is ambiguous on its own).

Furthermore, Shog's source post clearly states it's his personal list, not strict rules for the process. Omitting the additional explanation from the original makes them even worse. And that post certainly does not require a tag to strictly meet all the criteria. It's focus is entirely on practical considerations when you read down into the details, not strict adherence to a set of rules. They are only guidelines for evaluating whether burning a tag is a productive endeavor.

As written in the FAQ, the burination criteria are a jumbled mess of self contradictory requirements that can be easily abused to argue against burnination in nearly all cases. We must improve this situation. How can the guidance be reworked to convey the original intentions without being actively harmful? Just expanding on what's there is insufficient. They need to be totally rewritten.