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I have stumbled upon the tag, thinking it was quite useless. It seems that the subject of company tags has already been discussed:

And in the Stack Overflow blog post The Death of Meta Tags from 2010.

So now I see that there is no tag for Google for example, and the tag was also removed, previously having a nice warning "DO NOT USE THIS TAG!!!".

Why does this tag still exist? Why not delete it? How about a new company tag being created or used? What should be done?

I feel that the work has been started, but not finished. Am I missing a part of the story?

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  • Odds are it did end up getting deleted, but someone else was hungry so they re-created the apple.
    – Servy
    Mar 31, 2017 at 14:37
  • Does SO able to block the recreation of deleted tags? Mar 31, 2017 at 14:38
  • 1
    Yes, they can blacklist them so they never come back. There is even a tag on meta for blacklist requests. Mar 31, 2017 at 14:39
  • 1
    Removal of such tags must be done by the community (for the most part), and it is a rather mundane task (read: so boring you would probably get more enjoyment out of dripping scalding hot bacon fat on your own eyes), so it generally takes a long time. The time it takes is directly related to how many questions a given tag has, and many other factors. The point being that the work did start and the is a lot of unfinished work left to do.
    – user4639281
    Mar 31, 2017 at 15:39
  • Ok so I can feel free to remove all company tags that I find? Mar 31, 2017 at 15:47
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    No. You should first check to see that there is a burnination request for that tag. If there is, check the consensus and follow that. If there is not, create a new one, and wait for consensus.
    – user4639281
    Mar 31, 2017 at 15:57
  • Related: How should we make tag blacklist requests?
    – Veve
    Jun 15, 2017 at 12:11

1 Answer 1

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I'm not convinced tag burnination is a good approach should for companies where no product exists that has the name of the company, but where the company name is often used as an - unofficial - reference to one or more products of the same company.

A good example for that would be , which you mentioned yourself. As I explained in my answer to the question What are ABAP and SAP? :

[...]

Although SAP ERP isn't the only software sold by SAP, people are typically refering to SAP ERP when they say "they're using SAP at work". It's important to note, though, that SAP is the name of the company and no software is sold or licensed as just "SAP".

[...]

I agree that it would make sense to burninate the tag in analogy with the & tags and replace it with product specific tags like , , , , etc. However, this may confuse eg. ABAP programmers and leave them puzzled on which tags to use in one of two situations :

  • Their question involves , but they don't think about using that tag as they're used to just calling the product (like almost everyone does)
  • They have a general SAP-related programming question that doesn't refer to any specific SAP product

Note that this second situation doesn't apply only to companies where no product exists that has the name of a company. As I - just - commented here :

Personally, I don't how burninating eg. the & tags would help people with general programming problems that apply to multiple products of that company. When considering situations where a programming question may apply to eg. all apple operating systems or all samsung mobile devices, allowing only more specific tags would result in less exposure of the question and therefore a reduced likelihood of getting your question answered. How is that progress?!

I raised this issue earlier today in the form of the question Should we burninate [sap]?. Someone pointed out that my question and your question are related (pretty closely actually), which is how I ended up here.

Anyway, I basically don't think it's a good idea to burninate tags like or because they're useful in cases that involve multiple products of the same company. In case of the tag there's also the fact that the name SAP is often used as a reference to SAP ERP or one of its predecessors, which is an extra argument for not burninating it.

However, that's just my very personal opinion. I guess it's up to the community to decide, and there's now an official burninate request for the to set things in motion if the community agrees upon burnination.

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