That is strange. When looking at what jobs to show you we discard those with tags you don't want to work with.
I'll look if there's a bug somewhere.
Adding a bit more context after the discussion on the question.
The idea is that the "tech you prefer not to work with" acts as a hard filter for jobs. Those that have at least one of the tags you don't like won't be shown to you. The "tech you want to work with" doesn't do anything at all for the job ads. It does for other things though.
Getting this right is a bit tricky I think. It's a decision between showing you jobs which might not be relevant (by ignoring tech you like) or not showing you a really good match (by using tech you like). The latter case will act as an extremely aggressive filter on jobs. For example, if you like c#, but an employer tagged their job with asp.net, we'd not show you that job. Even though chances are that it's a very good fit for you.
So the decision we made was to not use these tags, because we think a missed opportunity is worse than the annoyance of seeing some bad jobs. We do try to show you good jobs for you, and the tags they have are just one part of what goes into the decision.
The same should be said about evaluating the job yourself. The tags are just a very slim summary . For example "java robotics" can describe an exciting position building the AI unit for helper robots at Good People Ltd, as much as it can describe building payroll software at Killer Robots Inc. There's also plenty of cool ones out there with badly chosen tags.
Finally, it's not a given we won't ever use these things. While we won't probably implement a hard filter, giving more weight to the tech you like is definitely on the radar.