The x86 and x86-64 (and i386) tags should be removed from the Intel collective, but not because of who designed the ISA, or that other x86-64 vendors exist.
TL;DR: The real problem is that Intel is a big company that does lots of quite different things, and has software products that are of little interest to people that know about details of their CPU hardware (and vice versa).
The fact that AMD (and VIA) also make x86-64 CPUs is not really critical, nor is the fact that AMD architects designed the 64-bit extensions to x86. (See also: The most correct way to refer to 32-bit and 64-bit versions of programs) We do already have the ability to tag amd-processor x86 for performance questions specific to AMD microarchitectures (or their SIMD extensions like XOP). As discussed in comments, it's fine if a collective includes a tag that isn't exclusively relevant to that collective. Besides, most people using Intel tools to develop software don't want to stop it from running on AMD CPUs, and many actively do want it to be portable.
What's more relevant is that this collective currently includes x86 and x86-64, which are most often tagged with assembly, but the collective describes itself as being about Intel software and tools. e.g. their compilers, icc and intel-fortran, libraries like openvino and intel-mkl, and even Intel builds/distributions of existing software like intel-python and intel-tensorflow1.
The current description for the Intel Collective is:
A space for developers to collaborate on Intel software tools, libraries, and resources. Share knowledge and connect with Intel product experts. Find the information you need to drive innovation and simplify development from edge to cloud with Intel.
If "resources" include Intel's optimization manual, and "Intel Product Experts" include micro-optimization experts who know about Intel microarchitectures, then, yes, there's some overlap between that description and questions like Deoptimizing a program for the pipeline in Intel Sandybridge-family CPUs and Why does my Intel Skylake / Kaby Lake CPU incur a mysterious factor 3 slowdown in a simple hash table implementation? (Pipeline nukes because of the mechanism Intel CPUs use to provide TLB coherency, going beyond the on-paper specs).
But, if so, that's too broad. It makes little sense to lump that together with software stuff like openvino and realsense (computer-vision libraries and hardware) and intel-python (https://stackoverflow.com/collectives/intel?tab=tags).
Especially since many x86 questions are actually about debugging and writing assembly programs, i.e. correctness problems and system call / library ABIs, and assembler syntax, not really relevant to performance or anything other than assembly-language hobbyists / beginners learning their way around. And about tools like assemblers, compilers, and disassemblers. So fully not relevant to people using Intel's performance libraries.
Assembly language / machine-code details are almost never relevant to higher-level stuff, so including them in the same collective as computer-vision, quicksync video tools, and so on, makes no sense. (So that definition of "resources" shouldn't include Intel's ISA manuals, either. That's basically its own thing, already well-covered by x86. And for hobby OS kernels, tags like osdev and bootloader combined with x86 or x86-16.)
If the collective wanted to include stuff that low-level, it should include sse, avx, and especially avx-512, since Intel is currently the only vendor selling CPUs with AVX-512 SIMD support. (But I don't think it should.) And Intel has an intrinsics guide, which is a pretty important "resource" for people writing code using them.
We should narrow the scope of the collective to match what was probably intended
Just Intel software / tools, not hardware (although that does still lump together computer-vision stuff with intel-fpga, and Intel profiling tools like intel-vtune). I guess Collectives are supposed to be broader than tags—that's the whole point—but it seems too disparate.
There are some gray-area tags like intel-pmu which are clearly Intel-specific, but are generally about low-level details, even moreso than VTune.
The Collective is also missing sgx (Software Guard Extensions) which is an Intel technology for running code in a protected "enclave", with some special toolchain support for building code to run in, and other code to communicate with it. That might actually be appropriate, especially if we're going to keep super-low-level stuff like intel-tsx (transactional memory) as part of the Intel Collective.
The fact that I'm currently at the top of the Intel Collective leaderboard since I joined it yesterday is basically a joke. I know of the existence of many of their libraries and things, but I've never used the TBB or MKL libraries, let alone their computer-vision stuff. If the leaderboard is dominated by people answering assembly / cpu-architecture / performance questions, it seems to make a mockery of what the whole thing was supposed to be about. (Especially assembly homework-debugging questions, although those don't get a lot of upvotes since they usually have near zero future value because the reason assembly beginners are having problems is that they don't know how to put pieces together in the first place, and thus can't break their problem down to a [mcve].)
Footnote 1: I don't know how many programming questions there can be about tags like intel-tensorflow or python; unless they extend the language / API with new functions. Questions are probably just about installing them, or get tagged because that's the version they happened to be using... But the existence of tags like that is off-topic for this meta Q&A.
Compared to other Collectives like Go
Unlike, for example, the Go Collective, where everything is in one programming language that all members of the Collective at least have in common, the current set of tags in the Intel Collective can easily include questions that have no relevance or interest to people interested in other questions in tags that are part of the same Collective.
Fortunately, the "Intel Collective" is just extra visual noise in the tag field, and at the top right of question pages. It doesn't actually result in showing you questions you don't want to see if you don't visit the Collective page. Therefore, its existence doesn't make anything substantially worse, and in that sense it doesn't matter what tags it includes.
If its existence can save us from people tagging intel on questions about things that already have more-specific tags like intel-fortran or intel-tensorflow, that's great. (In my opinion, the [intel] tag should be used for things like CPU microarchitecture questions that are about Intel CPUs specifically, e.g. with [cpu-architecture] and [x86]. Definitely not where another tag already has intel in the name)
[amd64]
(currently synonym of[x86-64]
) :P