In this comment in a burninate question, Robert Harvey stated the following:
The tags have to be removed from questions one at a time. That means that 1,828 edits have to occur to remove this tag.
It struck me as odd that SE didn't allow for automated tag deletion, so I searched it and found this answer:
How are tags removed? Is there other cleanup work that should be done first?
(…)
There is an automated process available developers and maybe Community Managers (reference), but this is dangerous (related post) and it would likely be preferred to handle the questions manually so we don't lose the additional attention required on a per-question basis.
In the link to "related post" above, user Dukeling states the following about automatic burnination:
This does:
- No checks to ensure we're not leaving a question untagged
- No checks to make sure we don't remove a problematic tag from something with pending close votes (homework was a major pain to exterminate)
- No sanity to allow an easy undo of the operation
In another answer on the same question that triggered my curiosity, user slugster also observed the following:
Here's a not-as-contrived-as-it-seems analogy: you have a plot of land that is infested with a particular type of weed. It's obviously weed, no doubt about it. You annihilate that weed with some weedkiller. Then you find you've removed the only food source for a small animal you had no idea existed.
My question is, isn't there any way to improve the automated burnination tool? If not by changing the existing tool level, couldn't a protocol (and possibly additional necessary tools) for burninating be proposed? I have in mind something like this:
- Blacklist a tag
- Automatically warn users that have been active (asking or answering) in questions with this tag of its impending burnination (offering a chance to the "small creatures" slugster spoke of to point out the importance of the tag)
- At the same time, automatically ask from the users who created questions with this tag to change or remove it, giving them a deadline (say a week) to do so.
- If no small creatures protested, delete the tag (with the burnination tool)
- Delete all questions who had only this as a tag and weren't corrected in the previous step
This would:
- Save the moderators from having to manually edit all questions (Robert Harvey's issue)
- Make burnination a longer process, so that even though it'd still be permanent, would allow for users to protest (slugster's issue), and thus render an "undo" option less likely to be necessary (one of Dukeling's issues)
- Ensures no questions are left untagged (another of Dukeling's issues)
- Ensures no questions are added to the tag during this "judgement" period and that it does not re-emerge after being burninated
- Allow for streamlined deletion of unnecessary tags (which seems to be an issue to some, given the number of burnination requests)