Recently I was notified that a user, who has since been suspended, went on a mass-edit spree to remove tags that they believed were not needed on the site. Many of these tags had, and still have, thousands of questions associated with them. Each tag also has followers to it, the top one having 26k followers.
Now, this isn't a question of whether or not these were valid tags that should remain on the site. They very well could be terrible tags that potentially should be removed altogether. The problem is one user decided to single-handedly edit out the tags without input or discussion from the people who use those tags, and without leaving documentation that would allow them to understand what happened or why.
We have a well-documented process in place to remove tags, and we even have a site to have the discussion on. Following this process allows the community to be involved, and decide if a tag should be removed and why. Documenting the process of removing a tag on meta makes the removal visible to everyone, allowing others to help or to raise an objection. We do not want this to be done in the shadows where significant damage could be done by a single user.
The burnination process is in place to allow users who follow a tag or contribute to it to have the chance to weigh in on the validity of the tag, prior to its removal. If a tag is removed without discussion or feedback, then the workflow of those who depend on the tag (whether for identifying questions that interest them or ignoring questions that do not) is potentially impacted by it.
This is just a friendly reminder that we have a process to do this and that it should be followed... The incident that prompted this resulted in our team spending the morning restoring tags to over 12 thousand questions, a waste of time both for us and for the editor who removed them.
Now back to your regularly scheduled Friday.