I recently stumbled on the lib tag, with no wiki and 779 questions covering a wide range of topics.
The commonality in all the questions is that users are referring to a "library", for which it is clearly a synonym/abbreviation.
Some are just mentioning the library they use. Some are (off-topic) requesting a library recommendation. Many are talking about a shared-library or static-library or class-library, all of which have their own tags.
However, the library
tag has been blacklisted. I suspect many questions with this tag were by users attempting to use the library
tag, finding none, and substituting this instead.
A previous burnination request in 2014 suggested removing libraries; comments indicated we should blacklist a direct synonym. The lib tag was created in 2017, a few years after that discussion.
1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
No.
The contents of the questions to which it is applied cover a wide range of topics, all of which use (or the user is requesting) a particular library, but are many different libraries (or the process of importing libraries, etc.). In most cases, if a library-related tag is needed, libraries should suffice.
2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
The concepts shared-library or static-library or class-library which are on-topic have their own tags. When dealing with multiple libraries there's a tag for that.
This tag is an easy place to find close-able questions asking for library recommendations, though. 329 of the 589 [editor's note: outdated numbers; valid at the time of writing] questions are unanswered.
3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No. The posts mentioned a library in the question. The lib tag adds nothing. It's not useful for searching. Only 83 of the 589 questions have more than one upvote denoting useful questions. Sorting the tag by votes shows a few useful questions at the top of the list, none of which need the lib tag for their usefulness.
4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Yes, it means a library, which was burninated in 2012 and blacklisted in 2013. Sadly it appears a single question survived this purge and lib came roaring back to life in 2017.
Is the tag harmful?
In a large number of questions it's one of five tags, possibly replacing a better tag. It's actively being (mis)used, with 6 questions tagged thus this week, 16 this month. At 588 (surviving) questions since January 2017, that's an average of 10.5 per month.
ar
utility — those are static libraries. It is not an active tag; the last question was asked more than a year ago. It was at one time the ar tag, but the augmented reality people ended up coopting (dominating) that tag, which is now a synonym of augmented-reality.