Yet another burnination request (if you couldn't tell by the title you haven't been here long enough)...
Today's culprit: The abuse tag
Stats: 35 questions (Update 10 June 2022: 20 questions), only five visible questions in the last two years (although I'm sure there's many that have been removed - I've seen Meta discussions about questions with this tag). Somewhat of a tag wiki.
Burnination Questions
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied, and is it unambiguous?
It does somewhat describe the contents of the questions (some sort of mis-use of something), but it is completely ambiguous and can refer to literally any programming language. Also, when "abuse" occurs is case-by-case and determined by the user.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
No. It does not refer to a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, a software tool, or a topic that is unique to software development.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
I would say no here - the tag covers a wide range of issues, and I've seen it used every time in a different case. One question referenced abusing
globals
in Perl, but it didn't need the tag - the question wasn't even about abuse, it was just added because the question mentioned abusingglobals
(only once).Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Edited: After seeing some responses, I'm changing my answer to a no for this question. Robert Columbia covered this pretty nicely in his response.
Leave your thoughts about whether or not this tag should be burninated down below. While many of the questions on the tag are actually good questions (above zero score), I think the majority of the questions could use more specific abuse tags, such as security (which could be more appropriate than abuse in some cases). We'll have to figure out specific re-tagging contenders in the future to make the burnination successful.
Edit: Also, misuse is a good related tag. One user in the comments has proposed abolishing abuse and expanding misuse.
misuse
tag, it's hard to see what more theabuse
tag offers. How would one differentiate them? — On the other hand, the definition ofmisuse
tag seems unnecessarily restrictive. What about programming situations where one deliberately misuses a language or framework feature in order to accomplish some tricky goal? I'm sure we've all done this. So I'd say: abolishabuse
and broadenmisuse
.misuse
. I edited my post.misuse
can come from lack of understanding, butabuse
always implies malicious behaviour, so the two are not the same thing.