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Sep 27 at 9:45 comment added Cody Gray Mod I mean, that's exactly the point here, though, right? Closure is used to control interactions on a post. This is what we seek to do. And the tags being applied here are not categorizing or organizing anything. Nor are they consistent with the tagging system long-followed and recently-documented by staff. The evidence all suggests that tagging is the wrong tool for the job. Your major argument against it is that staff or mod privileges are required to mess with the tags, and I'm saying that's not a compelling enough argument to justify using the wrong tool for the job.
Sep 27 at 9:43 comment added Cody Gray Mod If the discussion has moved elsewhere and is not going to be seen on the old question, then closing it as a duplicate makes perfect sense and is completely appropriate. Reopening it is not appropriate, because it's sending the wrong signal. Yes, the community also has the privileges to close staff announcements that they don't like, and even vote to delete them. But we strongly encourage people not to do that, and we take action to prevent it from actually happening. It's not as if this is foreclosing the community's ability to discuss things. They can just ask a new question.
Sep 27 at 9:42 comment added goldPseudo Tags are used to categorize and organize information, closure is used to control interactions on a post. Staff has been using [status-*] tags to categorize how the item is (or was) being tracked internally, which is completely tangential to whether anyone is interacting with the post or not.
Sep 27 at 9:35 comment added goldPseudo @CodyGray That implies that the community should no longer have any opinion on whether something is a duplicate or not. Just because a staff member unilaterally decrees that a feature request is covered elsewhere doesn't mean that the community needs to agree; if enough people feel that it still covers different ground and choose not to abandon it, or to continue discussing the issue, that's hardly an abuse of tools. Just because staff no longer chooses to follow the discussion doesn't mean that further discussion isn't warranted, or that it doesn't have value.
Sep 27 at 9:04 comment added Cody Gray Mod Sigh, you already covered this when you said "A proper solution consists of using the available tools appropriately." That goes for the privileged community members who abused their reopen-vote privileges. Raise a flag on it; let a moderator handle it. Or, we can just apply a lock on the question (historical or obsolete). That people will do stupid things and misuse the tools does not justify us misusing the tools and applying status tags. [status-duplicate] is the close-as-duplicate feature. [status-obsolete] is the obsolete lock. Tagging is inappropriate here.
Sep 27 at 4:33 comment added goldPseudo @M-- I don't want to come off as saying that closing is bad; closing for any reason can shut down the discussion, which is appropriate, but that doesn't permanently capture the most important information of "we're not paying attention to this; go over there to discuss this further". Whether closed as a duplicate or not, It still has the same basic problem in that if the post is re-opened, one needs to dig through the history to uncover the relevant context, and most people will not do that.
Sep 27 at 4:18 comment added M-- One thing that I'd want to mention is that closing as a dupe and other closure reasons are different. You do touch on that, but maybe not as clearly that I'd like :) While closing a feature request which is under review does not replace usage of status tags, closing them as dupes does not raise as much problems.
Sep 27 at 4:15 comment added M-- Thank you, this is valuable history. So much so, that I think you may want to post something to MSE and expand on your tl;dr. Cheers.
Sep 27 at 3:15 history answered goldPseudo CC BY-SA 4.0