bioinformatics is a meta tag, indicating a particular industry while not adding any relevant, problem-specific information
While true in many (most?) cases, this is generally incorrect, because bioinformatics, just like technologies, uses a specific jargon, and has specific solutions.
Here’s a concrete (invented, but plausible) question as a counter-example:
I am trying to determine the distribution of the quality of my reads using the following code. Unfortunately the results are weird: I am expecting a smooth distribution but I only find five different values. What am I doing wrong?
Without knowing that this question is about bioinformatics, it makes very little sense (what reads? what quality?) but in the context of bioinformatics this question is understandable, complete (assuming it has code), easily answerable and fully within the scope of a programming website.
Of course there’s nothing wrong with prefixing the question with “This is a bioinformatics question” or even “this is a question about short-read sequencing data” but that’s what tags are for. In fact, tags are routinely used to set the question’s context: There are many questions that are only understandable once you know that they’re about c++, for instance. In this context, bioinformatics is a technology tag, not a meta tag.
Personally I’d prefer if we migrated all such bioinformatics questions to the more appropriate https://bioinformatics.stackexchange.com. Afterwards I wouldn’t be opposed to getting rid of the tag. But so far there was no consensus to migrate all such questions, and in fact when I suggested this previously there was a majority against. So until that happens, we need the tag and it has the exact same rationale as language tags.
What’s more, I actively use this tag to find questions that (a) are unanswered, or (b) would benefit from being migrated.