The fact that the tag is based on a website name is entirely a red herring: some such tags are quite terrible, while others are perfectly legitimate. The deciding factor is whether the website has some relevance to the programming environment.
A site with an API standard of its own that has a lot of questions? Perfectly reasonable. A site that has its own language, framework, or platform that it allows users to run code on? Yeah, that will work.
A tutorial site? No. A site that some program needs to scrape? No.
A site that uses standardized metadata to offer a very limited subset of API-like functionality, as the sole current livestream.com example appears to indicate? Ehhhhhh not so much. There's not much that really appears to be about that site's unique programming traits; it's simply one site out of potentially hundreds or thousands using the same basic tags as any other site would to do the same thing. It's basically just a different type of scraping.
The real question, then, is whether there's a unique (or essentially unique) standard (or API definition, or whatever) defined by the site in question for their own purposes. That narrows things down, because there's then questions that have to do with the intricacies of that standard that might not apply to anything else. That's the point of a tag: to identify the common points of meaningful difference in programming.