10

A company called Hikvision is making networked security cameras (IP cameras). They offer an API to their devices they call "Intelligent Security Application Programming Interface" (ISAPI).

Users asking questions on SO have been reusing the tag which is originally for Microsoft's IIS web server (ISAPI on Wikipedia).

Further, their cameras seem to be usable for automatic license plate recognition (ALPR), or license plate readers (LPR). The users of Hikvision seem to just tag their questions with , which is about printers.

What to do?

I just saw this because I monitor the ALPR tag, a "subtag" of . I'll retag the stuff right now but this is going to keep happening. I don't want to be responsible for tags I have no interest in (ISAPI, line printers). I also don't know if this is even considered an issue that needs a resolution.

8
  • 8
    We should probably have tags called hikvision-isapi and hikvision-lpr -- that's the standard procedure for ambiguous tags: the new one gets its own tag with "vendor-product" syntax. We could also look to see whether there are any tags for competitor products and similar offerings, e.g. Axis-LPR or Avigilon-LPR or anything.
    – TylerH
    Commented Oct 30 at 18:54
  • 3
    I think such specific tags serve no purpose. there's hardly any watchers on the hikvision tag itself (19 right now), and those would have even fewer. besides that, I highly doubt the hikvision users will care to use those tags. they're mostly new accounts, not knowing how to use the site, what the customs are. hoping they'll use the right tags is doomed. Commented Oct 30 at 19:00
  • 5
    New users certainly won't use the right tags if the right tags don't exist, and new users can't create new tags on their own. There's no issue with low-volume tags that are appropriate, and I don't see any issue with these not being appropriate. Someone can ask a valid question about programming using the Hikvision IS API, can they not? QED, a tag for the Hikvision IS API is warranted.
    – TylerH
    Commented Oct 30 at 19:41
  • 1
    I respect your principled stand for giving users the choice of using such tags, that they couldn't create on their own. if you created those tags, even if you put these tags on existing questions, I predict that a good fraction of new questions will miss those tags, and continue to apply the wrong ones. then we're back to a bunch of mistagged questions, as well as questions with tags that call upon few to no watchers. I guess that can't be helped in any case. I guess we'll have to just give it a try? I'm skeptical. Commented Oct 30 at 20:30
  • 3
    I don't agree, hikvision-isapi is very findable if you type "hik" into the tag box, and clearly denotes what it is. It's also an XML-based web API, so relevant for Stack Overflow. Perhaps if we retag existing questions and remove the hikvision tag, it might be better, as that tag is too generic. Commented Oct 31 at 14:54
  • 1
    I don't think [hikvision] is too generic. it's quite specific. it collects all questions specific to their products and API. it's even more specific than most tags on this site. why do you think otherwise? Commented Oct 31 at 15:12
  • besides, we should not (I hope that's not contentious) partition the space of ideas. we should use several tags to describe the intersection. that's the normal case for any question. example: a question involving Qt and Python is not only tagged [pyqt] but [python] [qt] or perhaps [python] [qt] [pyqt]. that calls upon specialists that understand Qt in general, because their expertise is strongly applicable to the situation. I really hope I just said stuff that isn't contentious. Commented Oct 31 at 15:21
  • 5
    Because they have multiple specific APIs that are relevant, there is no other relevancy to Stack Overflow, as it's just a company name, not an actual product. A bit like how we have the amazon-ec2 and amazon-web-services but the amazon is not used and should be removed. We wouldn't have a cocacola tag if they had an API, we'd instead have cocacola-api. Commented Oct 31 at 15:26

0

You must log in to answer this question.

Browse other questions tagged .