I disagree with burning the tag. From the four criteria to burn a tag:
- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Yes. A crash means that the software exited in a dramatic and unexpected way. Normal use of the word doesn't have any other meanings.
- Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Because crashing relates to software, it is on-topic here, assuming they are fixing a crash through programming, not using software.
- Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No. The title or body should tell you that the program is crashing. Adding this tag just repeats that information.
- Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
The only other meaning I can see used for the tag would be with a simulation, like a car crash. However, I still feel that the term is very unambiguous, even when combined with other tags.
#3 has a great reason for removing the tag, but I still feel that the tag is so widely used and is not causing active harm that it should not be important to remove it.
I'd just like to remind everyone that there is a difference between a bad tag and a tag that should be burned. I fully agree that [crash] is a bad tag. However, right now it has 9,300 question and doesn't seem to cause any wide-spread harm.
How many tag burninations have you personally participated in? software-engineering had only 1,800 questions. The bulk of the work took 48 days.
Software Engineering was a tag causing harm to the site by allowing off-topic posts, and only had a relatively small number of posts. This is the sort of tag the community can handle.
There are a lot of tag burnination requests. 721 of them. 25% of them have been marked "completed".
This is a topic for a larger discussion, but there needs to be an understanding that it's very easy to make a burn suggestion, but very hard to follow through with it.
[crash] is not the tag that the community should spend effort to burn.