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Some tag wikis for software packages, e.g. , are updated with "current version" quips about what the current version is and when it was released. Shields.io provides these metadata badges found all over the place, so I figured I'd replace the static text like:

Django's latest version is 1.9.7 and was released on the 4th of June 2016.

with:

PyPI

[![PyPI](https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/Django.svg?maxAge=432000&style=flat-square)](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/Django)

Is this on-balance good or bad? Should I replace more? My edit got +3/-1, a small sampling of reviewers. Hopefully more people will weigh in here.

Pros

  • Updates automatically
  • Always up-to-date
  • Less things to review

Cons

  • Updates automatically
  • Uncontrolled third party (they're used so many other places though...)
  • Harder to get the Research Assistant badge
  • (Python/PyPI specific) /pypi/v/<project> returns pre-releases; I'm trying to fix that. If someone is looking at the SO tag-wiki for the current stable version, there are bigger problems.

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