Despite the the tag wiki content, I don't think that we should stop using / burninate [tag:protection] as the "community" decided to clean-up the "hyphenated tags" related to tags like [tag:google-apps-script], [tag:google-sheets] among others, in favor of using using two or more tags. As of October 10th, 2022: - [tag:protection] has 581 questions - Searching - `[excel] protection` returns 1568 results - `[google-sheets] protection` returns 589 results. So potentially there are more questions that might properly use this tag. Just this weekend on the Google Apps Script chat room was mentioned the use of this tag as part of the current curation effort for improving the [tag:google-apps-script] with with a FAQ. <hr> [tag:protection] "should" be used together with - [tag:google-apps-script] and [tag:google-sheets] for questions about programming issues protecting a sheet or range when [tag:google-sheets-api] is not being used, i.e. when creating a Google Workspace / Editor add-ons using the Spreadsheet Service (Class SpreadsheetApp). - [tag:google-sheets-api] for questions about programming issues protecting a sheet or range using the Google Sheets API. Also the tag of the programming language / runtime should be used. It should not be [merged / retagged] with / synonymized to [tag:access-control] because they have separate uses, i.e. [tag:access-control] could be used for questions about access to resources in file systems like Windows, Mac Os, Google Drive, OneDrive among others but not for protecting a spreadsheet sheet or range or a internal part of other kind of document. I think that [tag:protection] might be used together with tags that corresponds to other spreadsheets like [tag:excel] and other documents editors that also handle the protection concept separate from the access-control concept. Actually [tag:protection] and [tag:access-control] might be used together in questions about the interaction of the "access-control-list" of the file system hosting the document with the protection feature of the document editors.