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Again raised its ugly head:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/77083564/multiplying-large-numbers-with-precision-issues-how-to-correctly-handle-floatin

There seems to be only a single question for now. We'll never see any bonus or benefit for questions tagged with it, and already widely agreed about that.

Maybe consider blacklisting tag-creation for that specific tag (and others like , , et al.)

Apparently related, but no longer active:

We need to de-leet [leetcode]

Unfortunately I don't know any tool, to determine how frequently these kind of tags are deleted and recreated.

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  • 6
    The tag was not created with the linked question but already on Saturday and as usual, curators delete the tag from these questions (or the questions itself), business as usual... I think instead of your new thread, a comment on Martijn Pieters answer would have been enough. But I agree, blacklisting would be good, the tag reappears every couple of month and it's always a pain to get rid of it.
    – jps
    Sep 11 at 17:34
  • 3
    @jps I know it wasn't created with that question linked. The OP there won't have appropriate privileges to do that. Sep 11 at 17:44
  • 1
    It re-appeared again on a different question. So it seems frequent enough.
    – Lundin
    Sep 12 at 11:23
  • 8
    Mandatory pun: "Burninante 1337 code questions".
    – Lundin
    Sep 12 at 11:25
  • related: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/426399/… . I can venture a guess that when a tag does not pop up daily or weekly after burning it, there will not be much inclination to blacklist it. So if there is proof of that happening, do add it to the burn request I'd say.
    – Gimby
    Sep 12 at 13:21
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    I just ran across a newly added question that used the tag, so I removed it from there as well: stackoverflow.com/q/77093445/1108305. I think this illustrates that the tag will be used unless users are prevented from using it.
    – M. Justin
    Sep 13 at 0:55
  • @Lundin does that even count as a pun? It's directly what the site name, and thus the tag, is referring to. Unless the tag coincidentally happens to have exactly one thousand, three hundred and thirty-seven questions associated with it.... Sep 13 at 21:47

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