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The tag info page for the tag describes:

Use this tag to refer to processor cores or questions related to threads and parallel processing. For questions about .Net Core, please use the [.net-core] tag.

I notice that many users use the tag along with instead of the correct tag. I even did a retagging in some questions myself.

A search for tag yields 2,883 questions, core and .net 768 questions, and core and asp.net 333 questions.

Searching in Meta I found other old questions about the tag being misused for other things:

For parallel-processing, we already have a tag , and to threads we have .

Just the name core is ambiguous and many users don't read the description, so it has a potential to cause a lot of mistagging.

I propose rename to something like processor-core or to burninate the tag entirely.

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    Burninate the core tag — it adds very little, even retagged to the hypothetical processor-core tag, and is not helping SO. The many questions tagged with both core and .net should be retagged with .net-core (after checking, but it will be the correct action most of the time). The not quite so many questions tagged with both core and asp.net should probably be given much the same treatment, but I'm less sure of that (should the asp.net be left with .net-core, for example). That needs more of an SME (subject-matter expert) to pontificate. Oct 16, 2020 at 22:07
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    @JonathanLeffler core and asp.net should be edited into asp.net-core. It gets tiring to edit so many questions that incorrectly use asp.net for asp.net-core questions. Oct 18, 2020 at 13:11
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    @JonathanLeffler: agreed. As someone who spends a lot of time talking about CPU cores on Stack Overflow, IDK if I've ever used that tag for that meaning either. That's what cpu-architecture is for. I have no answers in [core], and probably never added it in an edit. We don't need a tag to specify a CPU core separate from the shared caches / memory controllers and other on-chip stuff that isn't a core. (cpu-architecture is pretty low-traffic, and it's already inherent in most questions whether it's about internals of a single core or not.) Oct 18, 2020 at 16:02
  • I have bad news. .NET Core is being renamed as of about next month. I wouldn't bother with this until the net tag for .NET version 5 (with its new name that I somehow don't know yet) is established.
    – Joshua
    Oct 18, 2020 at 16:45
  • @Joshua I don't know how the tags for the .Net family with be in SO, but I think we should have an agreed solution for this before the changes (if any) to the .Net tags take place, so they all could be corrected at the same time.
    – Magnetron
    Oct 18, 2020 at 18:38
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    No matter if we rename the tag or burninate it, I think it should be blocked for recreation. As the old questions point out, this tag has being misused in the past, has being renamed and/or burninate, and it continue to reappear and cause new issues.
    – Magnetron
    Oct 18, 2020 at 18:43
  • @CamiloTerevinto: is there an easy way to explain to a Unix programmer the differences between asp.net, asp.net-core, .net, .net-core? Or is it sufficiently complex that's it's best left to those with a need to know, rather than those (like me) who don't have a real need to know. Oct 19, 2020 at 1:22
  • @JonathanLeffler It's actually simple. .NET Core is a re-write of .NET Framework without some of the libraries (like WCF, WWF) and ASP.NET Core is a re-write of ASP.NET Framework without WebForms. Both "Core" are just the "next-gen" and, most importantly, open source. For a Unix programmer, the main difference is "cannot run natively" (.NET/ASP.NET) vs "can run natively" (.NET Core/ASP.NET Core) Oct 19, 2020 at 7:11
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    @CamiloTerevinto: Thanks. Oct 19, 2020 at 7:40

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