It seems to me that there's at least one Meta question being asked around tag burnination, or retagging, daily. The reason for this is simply that the number of tags that are irrelevant, or just downright useless, is finally starting to become a noticeable problem to many curators (even though it was first remarked upon a decade ago). And the reason there are so many bad tags is because of the relatively low bar of 1,500 reputation required to create a tag (yes there's a warning popup as per the above link, but users don't read).
This bar may have been appropriate when the site consisted mostly of users who were diligent and careful in their actions and involved in curation, but that's no longer the case in 2021. It's also the case today that more people outside the curation circle will have reached that amount of reputation, and will continue to accrue reputation, so raising that bar will only have the effect of kicking the can down the road.
In short, rep-gating tag creation is no longer an effective way to ensure that only quality tags are created.
Why does this matter, when we have the burnination and retag processes? Because those processes are very much a case of shutting the barn door after the horse has bolted, or in most cases attempting to, because (a) relatively few burninate/retag requests are actually posted (b) of those, many are declined for various reasons (c) they are extremely manual processes, requiring each question with a bad tag to be edited one-by-one to remove or replace said tag.
The best way to avoid hard work is to not have to do it in the first place. Therefore, I propose a new tag creation process, built around community consensus as well as reputation:
- The "tag creation" privilege becomes a "tag proposal" privilege. The reputation requirement remains at 1,500.
- When a user creates a tag, they are not actually creating it, merely proposing that it be created. That tag goes into a "proposed" status which sends it to a new "tag creation" review queue. The tag will not be discoverable in the standard manner, nor can it be applied to any question.
- The new review queue works similarly to Triage:
- If 3 users agree that a suggested tag is indeed worthy of creation, the tag's status is updated to "created" and it now functions as a tag does on the site currently. The user who created that tag will be notified that they can now start using that tag on their questions.
- Alternatively, if 3 users vote to reject that tag, or its approval time expires (suggestion: 24 hours from proposal) without receiving the 3 upvotes required for creation, it is set to "deleted" status and the user who attempted to create it will be notified.
Edge cases:
- If a different user attempts to create a tag that's already "proposed", they will be notified of this, and added to the list of users to be notified upon the approval or decline of that tag from the queue.
- If a user attempts to propose a tag that's already been deleted, they're informed of this and can choose to do nothing, or ask on Meta as to why this is and/or propose that tag be re-created (with valid reasoning, of course).
The nice thing about this proposal is that it also solves one of the biggest problems inherent in burnination, namely the large number of questions affected, because the "deleted" status can now be applied to a tag affected in such a way - instead of each question having to be manually edited to remove the offending tag. No, this doesn't prevent each question affected having to be examined to determine whether the tag should be removed and/or replaced, but it does (indirectly) address the lack of a "bulk untag questions" function.
(See also: Make it harder to create tags - this process is essentially a fleshed-out version of that, although I only noticed that question after I'd thought through and typed up everything above.)
*insert time window*
?[my-new-tag] (needs approval)
(if anything), with a link to the suggested edit review task providing an initial tag excerpt and tag description. If itâs rejected, so is the tag, and the tag is removed. If itâs approved, the tag is automatically applied to the question. In the meantime no other post may use this tag, and if the question ends up with 0 tags, maybe apply untagged or something.