I agree; though data science was originally synonymous with computer science, the subject of data science itself (like computer science) is an incredibly broad one: "extracting knowledge or insights from data" per the tag's own description. Like the subject of computer science, I think real questions on data science (rather than just questions where the tag is thrown on) are likely too high level, broad, or possibly opinion-based for this site.
I would say burninate. Glancing at the first page of questions tagged with it, its existence doesn't seem to improve the value or searchability of any of the ones I looked at.
Adding response to the burnination criteria since this past was originally made way back in 2016:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
No. What does data science mean here? Does it describe anything to do with this question?? What does web scraping have to do with data science?
This is the kind of question we see every day.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
No. We're a programming site here, not a science or math site (if you even agree that data science is its own thing and not just a modern name/digital version of statistics).
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No. Questions here are about programming. It does not make a difference what field you are programming in or for. Whether you are writing code for use by NASA or use in mom-and-pop cash register software, what's meaningful is the task you are trying to achieve with your code and what your constraints are. "Data science" tells us nothing about this.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Not really; it's a very broad term--a "data scientist" could be someone who works in visualizations, or who works in statistics, or data mining, or in analysis/insight, ad infinitum. The only relation is that you are doing some kind of analysis with lots of data in (typically) digital format.