Whatever the answer to your question may be, working your way through the Stack Overflow archive removing tags from questions isn't a responsible or useful thing to do. I would agree that, if a question is tagged only with a specific version of a language then it also should carry the general version tag, but the additional more specific tag is certainly doing no harm, and can usually be useful for some purposes
The case of Perl may be slightly different from other languages, because recent releases of Perl 5 have taken the opportunity to incorporate some useful ideas from the Perl 6 project, and these have occasionally been very significant. Built-in Unicode support has also taken huge strides forwards
The most significant release in my opinion have been versions 5.8, 5.10 and 5.14. That is not to say that there haven't been major alterations in other versions, but for the purposes of this question I am considering only the most effective differences
Version 5.8 is significant in part because it is binary incompatible with previous versions. This is the only place where backward-incompatibility is relevant, as Perl 5 continues to be able to run the vast majority of programs that were executable under 5.0. This version also implemented the first major Unicode overhaul and a new Perl IO susbsystem
Version 5.10 added the feature
pragma as well as the switch
feature, which added language words given
, when
, and default
and the smart-match operator ~~
. state
variables are new, and there are many significant enhancements to the regular expression syntax
Version 5.14 added non-destructive operation of s///
and tr///
, as well as support for Unicode 6 and IPv6
These are only the major changes that come to mind. Of course there are countless more less noticeable ones, and many bug fixes and optimisations
Perl is in the unfortunate position where, because of the existence of the Perl 6 project, it must continue to increment its minor version even when major changes are made to the language. It is also in the nature of Perl that, partly because it doesn't have a prescribed syntax tree, it is much more straightforward to add language features than it would be for more tightly-defined designs
In summary, my answer to your question is that it is very dependent on the subject matter whether versioned topic tags are useful of not. But as long as a question carries the unversioned tag as well, any number of versioned ones can be added without any detriment, and you are doing no one a service by starting a one-man crusade to remove versioned tags wholesale