I disagree with burnination. I believe this tag is useful. It does not fail all the burnination criteria -- the OP acknowledged it fails the first one.
Per the Burnination criteria, since the tag doesn't fail all the criteria, it should not be burninated.
Further discussion seems to fly in the face of this standard. But should you wish to ignore the burnination criteria and judge the tag on its merits as if there were no such criteria, read on.
It means the same thing in all common contexts
The OP acknowledged, and @Peter-Mortensen elaborated in the comments, that the README file (with various extensions) is a longstanding key element of coding. When I first started teaching myself to compile others' code, I knew to go to that file for usage instructions to get started, even if it just told me which other files to read in which order.
It doesn't mean anything else, at least in a programming context. It's unambiguous.
It (helps to) describe the contents of the question
I disagree with the second comment that it doesn't describe the contents. It very specifically identifies that a user is concerned with the content of a very specific file that the user knows others will interact with when attempting to use their software.
The README file is unique. It's like the first page of a book, where a tag generic to all pages wouldn't apply.
The "Desktop" folder on various operating systems is equally special. Questions relating to folders in general do not have the same context surrounding a folder that, by name and specific location, has a uniquely special interpretation and has unique questions with an associated tag.
The markdown tag by itself is insufficient; there are multiple flavors. Combining it with github or using github-flavored-markdown might almost suffice, except that the README is a unique file which prompts unique questions including (from a brief scan of the first page of results):
- Forcing uncached content so users will always see the newest content (a versioning concern)
- Where to locate the file to achieve particular results (a concern with customized rendering using software conditionals)
- Configuring software that auto-generates this file
That's just the first page.
There are sites devoted to best practices for Github READMEs, and templates for READMEs that show content important to programmers that goes far beyond basic Markdown.
It's not just about GitHub
Not all readme questions are github specific. There's questions for Docker Hub, Nuget, Gitlab, pub.dev, npmjs and more.
It adds meaningful information to the post
It is useful to know whether we are asking about the entry page or Markdown in comments, issues, FAQs, or other pages.
It is possible to be an expert
It looks like @VonC has answered 14 questions. @Chris has answered 11 including this one that I doubt a non-expert could answer. What other tag is appropriate for that specific question?
I personally have used the tag to search
As an open source project maintainer I have repeatedly searched for how to do things in Markdown on the front page of my site that hundreds of people read every day. I doubt I am the only one who has done so. There are high-quality questions and answers in the readme tag.
The tag is not harmful
The OP admits the tag is not harmful, generally treated as replacing other, more relevant tags. Very few of the tagged questions used the full quota of tags.
The OP's "but..." statement that it is not useful, however, is wrong.
markdown
is very common in the documentation space, and documentation is very important in the software development lifecycle.