I edited the question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/41814338/windows-containers-win32-api and added the tags windows-server-2016, docker and docker-container.
The edit was approved by two reviewers but rejected by other three with an interesting reason stated:
This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability.
Awesome.
Lets start with the end. Adding tags - unless you're adding 20 of them - does not actively harm readability. Changes aren't superfluous with the exception of using both docker and docker-container, perhaps. Even conceding that, the changes aren't superfluous with regard to the original post.
The edit does however make the post both easier to read and easier to find. It helps clueless readers understand what are these containers the question speaks of. Even if they don't know the answer, it saves OP comments saying things "I don't even know what the topic of the question is, here's a notification so you know I don't know!" More importantly, it helps people find the question.
Windows Containers is a Windows Server 2016-specific technology (yes, my comment there is incorrect; they don't exist on Windows 10, only on the server version). It's not unreasonable to assume that people who are interested in Windows Server technologies look mainly or exclusively at the windows-server-2016 (and/or windows-server) tags rather than at the general windows tag. Even if they do take a look at the windows tag, they are more likely to miss it there since they are both less interested in this tag, and because there's a lot more question traffic there. As I look at the tags, windows has 33 asked today, 426 this week, while windows-server-2016 has 25 asked this month, 111 this year. The general tag has more questions asked today than the relevant server tag this whole month. He who doesn't understand that makes the question easier to find shouldn't be allowed near a computer.
That's about the Windows Server 2016 tag. The Docker tags are useful because the Windows Containers technology was made especially to enable an efficient Docker implementation (instead of using Hyper-V). Perhaps Docker people (esp. those interested in Windows, given that Windows is mentioned in the question title) will have some insight about it. Perhaps not, but it's worth a try.
I've seen suggestion to write tedious (perhaps preemptive) explanations in the edit summary. That's unreasonable. I shouldn't have to fight "the Man" to make somebody else's question more accessible. Providing excruciatingly long edit summary for obvious edits because I have to anticipate unreasonable reviews is itself unreasonable too.
Another suggestion is just say "who cares?" It's not me who doesn't get an answer but rather Ahmad J. Hamad. What do I care?
I care because that seems to be the fate of questions about topics less popular than JS or Android. A question about AngularJS or React or something like that will be noticed within seconds, and in the off chance of it being something new rather then a duplicate it will probably receive an answer quite fast.
The more specialized and esoteric a question is it's harder for it to get noticed by the small minority of people who can actually answer it, and when people who (seem to) have no clue about it ruin its chances to get attention it just makes it worse.