Burninate request: paypal tag as unspecific to a product.
Similar: apple, microsoft, amazon, google, ...
clarifications
I was unaware it was a sponsored tag
Burninate request: paypal tag as unspecific to a product.
Similar: apple, microsoft, amazon, google, ...
clarifications
I was unaware it was a sponsored tag
Since this was brought up under my retag question, let me flesh this out a bit more.
There are indeed some tags that describe a company as opposed to a product. [apple] and [microsoft] are prime examples. But where the analogy falls apart is that you aren't referencing what you're programming. I made this case (10k+ link) on one of the deleted answers for the [apple] burnination
The problem with this thinking is that it's an optimism not borne out by how users actually use the tag. Apple makes products. People then ask questions about said products and not programming. iOS and OSX are places where you would write programs so they can have on-topic questions. But each is distinct from the other. Nobody says "I write programs in Apple", and if you said "I write programs for Apple" people would assume you were an employee.
PayPal is a company but (key distinction here) it's also a payment service. I call PayPal's API hundreds of times a day. I use PayPal services a great deal. So when a question is tagged paypal you almost always know they're referring to the service. Furthermore, questions about using the PayPal website are off-topic and would be closed.
So let's play When to burninate
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Yes. Using this tag means you're referring to a PayPal service
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Using APIs and service calls are definitely on-topic
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Yes. It lets you know the user is trying to call a PayPal service. It also helps PayPal employees find and answer questions (which they actively do)
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Unlike [amazon], where its usage is ambiguous since Amazon runs lots of disparate services, I cannot think of any context where PayPal is used to refer to anything but a payment service
As to the suggestion of paypal-api, my question is which one? This isn't going to clarify anything for users.
PayPal
tag will be in a similar situation as the Amazon
tag.
Mar 24, 2017 at 9:28