Timeline for The [protection] tag has been burninated
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
10 events
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Apr 13, 2023 at 15:10 | comment | added | TheMaster | @Lundin I believe anyone with any experience in the tag [protection] already made answers defending it. Those answers contained real data and logic. Those who want to burn it added nothing that's of substance, but a superficial claim that it satisfied all the criteria. For goodness sake, The answer with +10 has nothing except "Yes". It's basically, "We want to burn it. We have the power to do so. We're going to go ahead and do it, because we want it and have the power." | |
Apr 13, 2023 at 15:00 | comment | added | Lundin | @TheMaster Cleaning up domain-specific tags in an area where you have technical expertise together with similar users is a different story entirely - that's far more likely to be of longterm benefit to the site. But cleaning up broad and useless tags such as protection is close to pointless busy-work, and nobody can be an "expert of protection", so there's no expertise to turn to either. | |
Apr 13, 2023 at 14:53 | comment | added | TheMaster | @Lundin I remember it didn't used to be the case. Burnination was a huge effort and requiring cooperation of multiple users. I once gathered such users, because the tag names I participated, were annoying beyond belief. I'm glad fellow users felt the same and things were done and still good(not a hole that was dug and filled up). Current users, may have joined - probably because of a once good cause, but now seem to be doing pointless work. | |
Apr 13, 2023 at 14:39 | comment | added | Lundin | Well... the whole tag system is flawed by design, since it doesn't take much thought for a single person to aimlessly create a tag, but intricate rituals involving dozens of people to remove them. The majority of tags getting burninated are bad and confusing though without causing much in the way of active harm other than inconsistent use. Mostly burnination is just pointless busy-work to keep the meta crowd occupied, similar to digging a hole and then filling it up again. So let them, if it makes them happy... | |
Apr 13, 2023 at 14:33 | comment | added | TheMaster | @Lundin I've already commented on related lines this here. "Wildly" is a really subjective term. Any topic, however specific, can still be subdivided into multiple "wildly" different topics. And multiple "wildly" different topics can be added as branches to a single root. I believe burnination of parent root, just because there are multiple "wildly" different subcategories, is a mistake on principle. The main criteria is "Does it cause harm?", which it doesn't. But the opposition has the numbers, thus the power to change the course of events here. | |
Apr 13, 2023 at 12:57 | comment | added | Lundin |
Looking at data access only, it is already widely ambiguous. Write protection of files is a wildly different topic from write protection of memory-mapped addresses, which is a wildly different topic from C++ protected private encapsulation used during inheritance, which is a wildly different topic from buffer overrun and stack overflow protection, which is a wildly different topic from data race protection, which is-...
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Oct 14, 2022 at 17:10 | comment | added | bad_coder | The 1st thing that comes to mind when someone mentions protected is Java. | |
Oct 11, 2022 at 15:46 | history | edited | TheMaster | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
add third option to be left alone
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Oct 10, 2022 at 17:57 | comment | added | Wicket | I don't think that access-control and protection should be synonymized as the first might be used when the issue refers to a file / content / database management systems like systems that relies on user accounts while the later might be used when the issue refers the file format like a password stored in the file. | |
Oct 9, 2022 at 16:33 | history | answered | TheMaster | CC BY-SA 4.0 |