- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? Is it unambiguous?
It's a meta tag that is incredibly vague and as such, used willy-nilly pretty much everywhere (there are currently almost 19k questions with this tag applied). As such, it adds no value whatsoever - the specific MVC framework tag that almost always accompanies this one is far more useful.
The reason meta-tags are a problem is that they do not describe the content of the question. They describe some other aspect of the question, like the author’s skill level, or the author’s motivation for asking it, or generally what “kind” of question it is (poll, how-to, etc.).
To quote rene (emphasis mine):
... despite popular belief a tag is not meant to drive traffic from outside to a post. Tags are used by the experts to find the questions they can answer. Having tags that are cluttered with off-topic / low-quality stuff hinder them in providing valuable content. If anything, tag curation is aimed at helping those experts and that helps visitors that happen to use a tag search as well.
(emphasis mine)
- Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Yes, but again - incredibly vague. See also duplode's comment:
... if tags truly had to "fail all of these tests", criterion #2 would mean that no on-topic tag should be burninated. I think it would be more adequate to say that failing at least one of the tests is a necessary, though not sufficient, condition for burnination. Shog's wording when explaining criterion #4 appears to support this interpretation: "Be aware though, this [criterion] need only be a death sentence when [...]" -- the point being that criterion #4 alone might suffice to seal the fate of a tag.
- Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No.
- Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
No. Sometimes it's the model part of MVC, sometimes the model part of data or machine-learning models. For the former, the MVC framework in question will be a far more useful tag, and for the latter we already have data-modelling and machine-learning respectively (although I question the usefulness of those tags too - they also seem far too broad).
I appreciate that burninating a tag used on so many questions goes against the general burnination guidance, but this one is just taking up valuable disk space on SO's databases.
edit: comment about disk space was intended to be flippant, please stop "correcting" me regarding it.
edit: I've opened a question about the burnination process here.