I'm gonna go out on a limb here and say "Yes, this could be useful". Of course your wrapping of this suggestion in a statement like "so we can use it against a person when they nominate themselves for moderator" rustled everyone's jimmies, but having a feature where we can "tag" or "note" or "flair" a user could definitely be helpful - if only for your own peace of mind.
I would tag people as "author of $library" to never second-guess their answers to questions about $library, I would tag people as "designer|implementor of $language" so I'd accept their authority in questions about the design of said $language and I could mark people as "help vampire" or "ignores improvement requests" so I won't waste any time trying to help to improve or even answer their questions.
So, the main reason I could see a feature like this being useful is in this situation:
- There is a user who annoys you. For example you don't like the way they phrase their questions or answers.
- They do not respond positively to your comments. They don't reply, they don't follow them up by editing the requested information into their question or answer.
- Their questions are not closeable. Their answers are answers indeed.
- They're not performing offenses that are actionable by moderators, so you can't make the entire account go away by flagging.
- You want to keep using the site as you were, you just do not want to encounter this particular user again. Other users, perhaps those with more patience, are fine to interact with them - you just don't want to anymore.
Then, in that case, I can understand you want to add such users to some kind of "ignore list", or tag them with an appropriate tag that's only visible to you.
I have mentioned this before, but keeping this list merely mentally is very error-prone.
Of course you're not going to get this implemented by the Stack Overflow developers. Perhaps you could create a browser extension for it, or build a plugin for one of the existing ones.
And no, this is not meant as a replacement for flagging. It is meant as a way to prevent yourself from spending effort for people who don't want to be helped in the way you like to help people.
As far as I know being a help vampire is not flaggable (the couple of times I've tried this on users with 500+ low-effort questions nothing changed), so there's nothing you can do besides making a note that you don't like this user (other than doing nothing and forgetting it until the next time you encounter them). Whether you make this note mentally or digitally should not matter.
And if you're doing it digitally, why not do it in a way that's shared between machines and browsers? But to implement it, you're on your own, as far as I know. You can take a look at the "Reddit Enhancement Suite" for ideas.