Firstly, I think that renaming kernel-density to kde-kernel-density isn't correct; this won't solve the problem of people using kde for kernel density.
In regards to kde the information on the tag is a little confusing. The excerpt states:
KDE is a powerful graphical desktop environment for Unix workstations.
On the other hand the info states:
KDE is an international free software community producing an integrated set of cross-platform applications designed to run on Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, Microsoft Windows, and OS X systems. It is known for its Plasma Desktop, a desktop environment provided as the default working environment on many Linux distributions, such as openSUSE, Mageia and Kubuntu and is the default desktop environment on PC-BSD, a BSD operating system
The info page clearly notes that KDE does more than make a Desktop environment, but the excerpt implies the tag is just about their desktop environment (which is called Plasma). If kde is about the company KDE, then this is like tagging microsoft; which isn't a good tag for Stack Overflow (and the example tag doesn't exist for good reason).
As such, if the tag kde is actually meant to be about KDE's Desktop Environment, Plasma, then the tag should be renamed to kde-plasma and the info page updated to reflect that. This does mean that the questions will need to be checked to ensure that they aren't about a different KDE product (such as Krita), and retagged appropriately too, or voted to be closed if they are off-topic.
As 2 new tags have been added to the question, I thought I'd quickly put my thoughts on those.
kde4 probably doesn't need addressing. I doubt that confusion is going to occur between kde4 and kernel-density.
As for the existence of kde-plasma, then kde should likely be merged into kde-plasma and then kde made a synonym of it. If someone then goes to use kde when they want to ask about kernel-density, then the tag would be changed, and hopefully they would correct their tag. If they don't, I don't think there's any amount of handholding that could stop that person using the incorrect tag.