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I am the author of a scientific software package, about which people occasionally ask questions on Stack Overflow. I would like to create a tag for this, so I have an easy way to get directly informed about any new question.

Technically, there is no problem: I have the reputation to create the tag and add it to existing questions. However, as I am the author of the software in question, this has a whiff of abusing my privileges and self-advertisement. As tags are not owned by anybody, I cannot disclose my affiliation. How should I best go about this:

  • Should I just go ahead and create the tag?
  • Should I first put it for discussion on meta?
  • Something else?

Some notes:

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    I'd argue that if other people have started asking about it, there's not really a grey area (assuming it's on-topic, which it is in this case) -- just make it. If people are asking about it organically, someone somewhere will eventually make a tag for it anyway. That might as well be you now when there's relatively few posts (I read "occasionally" as an implication of "few" in this context) to add the tag to after the fact, rather than later when there's more. The obligatory disclaimers when answering probably still apply when you answer, but making a tag isn't really a problem. Commented Feb 19, 2021 at 9:05
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    Just make sure that if you decide to write an excerpt/wiki for the tag it's impartial/no adspeak/etc. but conflicts of interest aren't really relevant for creating the tag itself, just put in some extra effort to make sure it's on-topic and questions you tag are really about this product and don't happen to be using it in the code while it's not directly relevant for the question.
    – Erik A
    Commented Feb 19, 2021 at 9:46

1 Answer 1

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In my opinion...

At one extreme: if you still feel like a newbie on Stack Overflow, you don't understand the tag system too well and haven't created tags before, you're only even considering creating the tag because of your affiliation with your product, and after reading our general guidance on tag creation you still don't feel comfortable judging whether it would be the right thing to do, then it's appropriate to ask on Meta and you're welcome to do so. We'll be able to very quickly judge whether what you're planning makes sense. In general, when you've got a vested interest and you're worried about whether some action you plan to take is proper, it's good to ask first.

At the other end of the spectrum, if you are familiar with the site and with tag creation, you're already comfortable that creating the tag is the right thing to do, and you're not letting your affiliation with the product influence you into doing something that you'd consider inappropriate otherwise, then please skip asking for permission and just go ahead and create the tag. Just as we don't require you to ask permission before answering questions about a product you're affiliated with, you don't need to ask permission before creating a tag for it either. We trust your judgement, and your integrity.

Just don't abuse that trust by doing any of the obviously improper things someone with a conflict of interest might be tempted to do when creating a tag, like going around putting your new tag on not-really-related questions or filling the tag excerpt and wiki with marketing fluff whose only purpose is to tell the reader how great your product is. (This probably needn't even be said. If you are the sort of person who is scrupulous enough that you weren't comfortable creating a tag without first seeking out guidance on Meta about how to disclose your affiliation or whether any special rules apply to you, then you were never going to do any of those bad things anyway.)

Disclosing your affiliation when creating a tag is, in reality, completely optional, despite the Help Center saying disclosure is needed for any kind of contribution where you mention a product you're affiliated with. This is for the simple reason that it's impossible to comply with the rule in the Help Center; it says you should disclose your affiliation "in your post" and in this context there's no "post" to put the disclosure in. Don't worry that anybody is going to get cross with you over your failure to comply with a rule that it simply isn't possible to comply with; they won't. That said, if you still (needlessly) worry that you're being dishonourable in some way by creating a tag without disclosing your affiliation, you can voluntarily do so in the edit summary of an edit to the tag excerpt or tag wiki after you create it.

(Another thing that probably goes without saying: don't put a mention of your affiliation in the actual content of the excerpt or tag wiki just for the sake of trying to comply with the disclosure rules. The excerpt and wiki aren't associated with you like your posts and your individual edits are, so obviously conflict-of-interest disclosures don't belong there.)

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