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Recently I was notified that a user, who has since been suspended, went on a mass-edit spree to remove tags that they believed were not needed on the site. Many of these tags had, and still have, thousands of questions associated with them. Each tag also has followers to it, the top one having 26k followers.

Now, this isn't a question of whether or not these were valid tags that should remain on the site. They very well could be terrible tags that potentially should be removed altogether. The problem is one user decided to single-handedly edit out the tags without input or discussion from the people who use those tags, and without leaving documentation that would allow them to understand what happened or why.

We have a well-documented process in place to remove tags, and we even have a site to have the discussion on. Following this process allows the community to be involved, and decide if a tag should be removed and why. Documenting the process of removing a tag on meta makes the removal visible to everyone, allowing others to help or to raise an objection. We do not want this to be done in the shadows where significant damage could be done by a single user.

The burnination process is in place to allow users who follow a tag or contribute to it to have the chance to weigh in on the validity of the tag, prior to its removal. If a tag is removed without discussion or feedback, then the workflow of those who depend on the tag (whether for identifying questions that interest them or ignoring questions that do not) is potentially impacted by it.

This is just a friendly reminder that we have a process to do this and that it should be followed... The incident that prompted this resulted in our team spending the morning restoring tags to over 12 thousand questions, a waste of time both for us and for the editor who removed them.

Now back to your regularly scheduled Friday.

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    Thanks for the reminder. This'll keep Cody's fine crystalware (and mine, for that matter) from shattering for a while.
    – Makoto
    Sep 22, 2017 at 19:54
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    The thing is: that the process is most of the time booring... it's so boring that people disagree with a tag burnination simply because they consider the process itself to be of little use and a drag. Well, guess what, the process is indeed of little use, it's a drag, but the effects are worthwhile. Also, your guidance doesn't even consider clear cut cases, like the good old typo tag.
    – Braiam
    Sep 22, 2017 at 20:06
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    @Braiam: It does cover it. Talk to someone who's an expert on the topic matter, and if there's less than 50 questions in the tag, it's fine to take care of between the handful of you. For larger tags is where it starts to get unwieldy.
    – Makoto
    Sep 22, 2017 at 20:11
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    The [bug] tag would not be inappropriate. Almost anything is rate limited at the site. Tag removal is not. By far the simplest and direct way to slow them down. Sep 22, 2017 at 20:17
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    @Braiam: "If you have authoritative knowledge of technologies relevant to the tag, have conferred with at least one other trusted community member, and are dealing with a tag that has a small number of questions (< 50), then you can go ahead and remove it yourself or with a little ad hoc help." I admit I learned this relatively recently myself...but it is there.
    – Makoto
    Sep 22, 2017 at 20:18
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    I'd just like to point out that 12,000 tag edits is a lot of tag edits.
    – Compass
    Sep 22, 2017 at 20:19
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    Vast majority of tag removals discussed here on meta are a pointless waste of time, @braiam. Vast majority of worthwhile tag removals are removing newly-created tags with 1 question. The former don't become less a waste when done sloppy.
    – Shog9
    Sep 22, 2017 at 20:19
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    Which is why I get so tired of all these "rules" that has to be followed, except when I like some more important ones to be followed. It's like everything is created to introduce as much bureaucracy without any clear advantage over simply following good old anarchy. It doesn't make the process more efficient nor effective. There's no guarantee of experts (on the working of tags, not the topic these represent) being able to weight in these issues. I've said this before, tags are the most powerful tool that SE has, yet all that power is mostly wasted.
    – Braiam
    Sep 22, 2017 at 20:23
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    @Braiam I'm afraid I don't follow what you mean by "good old anarchy", specifically the combination of "good" and "anarchy".
    – TylerH
    Sep 22, 2017 at 20:24
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    Is there a threshold for the number of questions a tag should have before needing to discuss it on meta? Makoto mentioned 50. Is that the agreed upon number?
    – Suragch
    Sep 23, 2017 at 0:46
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    @Braiam I very much doubt that anarchy is a better system. There often is disagreement when submitting a burninate request, and just allowing people who want to destroy tags to freely destroy them, would probably spark Edit War 3, where the only defense against an improper burninate would be to reverse all the edits. And with robotic warfare, that would end badly for the site. Yes, we do have quite the backlog and it's slow and requires work. But it surely is better than nothing
    – Erik A
    Sep 23, 2017 at 8:43
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    @GolezTrol: The trouble is that any given edit removes one occurrence of the tag. Retagging a question — removing or adding tags — is one of those things that must be doable without friction. People continually make mistakes. What you're suggesting wouldn't work at the 'single edit level', therefore (not being able to remove a c tag from a c++ question or vice versa without going through MSO would be intolerable — and both those tags have way more than 20 questions). So, that probably wasn't what you meant. […continued…] Sep 23, 2017 at 17:24
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    The problem with these burnation is that lots of people like to discuss it on meta but very few then actively partecipate (did you all review entry, research, guidelines, godaddy, apple). My suggestion to all is stop posting burnation request and instead start helping out to clean up the request we already have. Sep 23, 2017 at 20:16
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    "We do not want this to be done in the shadows where significant damage could be done by a single user." sounds like something that should be rate limited instead of finding out about it after the fact...
    – casperOne
    Sep 23, 2017 at 23:58
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    Not everyone visits Meta, can it be made clear while editing that it is not encouraged to do these mass-tag removals on your own? What if, in the future someone decides to remove tags from another 12K questions and he doesn't know about this consensus because he doesn't visit Meta? Sep 27, 2017 at 6:13

1 Answer 1

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We do not want this to be done in the shadows where significant damage could be done by a single user.

Then please also create and run some security scripts that look for such suspicious behavior like mass tag removal. Reminding people is nice but may not persuade those who just want a tag removed without discussion. Better to be safe than sorry.

The incident that prompted this resulted in our team spending the morning restoring tags to over 12 thousand questions, a waste of time...

Couldn't you just kind of undo all the tag changes of the user for a certain time period? Such tools, if available, might be very handy.

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    Yeah, I think we can avoid rate limiting tag edits or edits in general and still include a warning to mods that someone has just made 12k tag edits. Heck, even a warning at 500 tag edits would probably not have too many false positives.
    – TylerH
    Sep 23, 2017 at 16:07
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    Technically no one should be editing just the tags during burninations anyways. Questions that require just tag edits should be left to the end for the CM tool to take care of. I think more than 10 tag-only edits in a short period of time should raise an auto flag.
    – user4639281
    Sep 23, 2017 at 18:43
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    This chat conversation describes the available tools. Quotes: I got to use a tool I've never touched before and wasn't sure actually worked [...] no idea what it was originally intended for. Added 5 years ago with the comment "new route that adds a single tag to multiple questions DANGEROUS!"
    – user6655984
    Sep 23, 2017 at 22:14
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    I like the suggestion in this post. Just like serial voting reversal, implement a serial tag-removing reversal. Make the perpetrator think they've done a good and thorough job wrecking the site, only to find their sabotage undone the next day. That will make them think twice before trying again.
    – Mr Lister
    Sep 25, 2017 at 12:42
  • I'd be more of a fan of a tag removal to have a 24(?) hour waiting period, during which it can be cancelled by moderators (or someone else?) if they feel the matter has not been adequately discussed. Perhaps involving an automated post to the effect of "Tag [X] will be deleted" for the sake of exact documentation.
    – acdr
    Sep 26, 2017 at 7:35
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    @acdr That is an orthogonal suggestion; it doesn't fix someone burning 12 thousand tags at 1000/day. Sep 26, 2017 at 13:59
  • @Yakk Not retroactively, no, but I imagine it might be a lot easier to hit a "deny request to remove tag" button than to edit the tags of a question. (And the same consideration for writing a script to perform those actions programmatically.) But thinking about it, you're right in that that's an orthogonal suggestion: it wouldn't prevent anyone from doing bad things to begin with.
    – acdr
    Sep 26, 2017 at 14:40
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    @acdr People use the wrong tags all the time. Editing tags is appropriate, and there can't be a delay for such changes. Your proposed solution would break the rest of the site.
    – user4639281
    Sep 26, 2017 at 15:31
  • I'm not proposing a delay on editing tags on a question. I'm proposing a delay on removing the existence of tags from the site, like the OP's tale.
    – acdr
    Sep 27, 2017 at 8:33
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    @acdr: You can't trivially draw that distinction. A tag is composed of a body of questions which have it. Removing a tag from all of the questions is removing it from the site. You can't prevent the latter without interfering with the former, unless you use some kind of rate-limiting or otherwise statistical, non-binary approach to the problem.
    – Kevin
    Sep 27, 2017 at 17:05

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