From the tag usage guidelines for for [tag:policy]: > Best practice and style are at the core of every program; there is always a better way to do something. Policy helps programmers determine how something should be written. From the tag wiki description for for [tag:policy] (emphasis mine): > Policy **is a more or less ambiguous** way of describing the best way to do something in programming. [...] This can pertain to the way a method returns a value, the way inheritance is structured, and the way to exit a loop, among other things, and **it can vary from language to language.** The wiki also includes a link to the [Wikipedia page on "Programming paradigms"](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Programming_paradigm), a language-agnostic page whose topic is covered by more specific (but, for the sake of focus, without any assumption on whether or not they're good) tags such as [tag:imperative], [tag:functional], [tag:declarative], and so on. Let's take a look at the [four criteria](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/239190/when-to-burninate/239191#239191) for burnination requests: 1. **Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?** No. The tag description describes it as "more or less ambiguous". 2. **Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?** To my understanding, questions about "best practice" _might_ be on topic, but they're better suited for (and more much less likely to be flagged as opinion-based or too broad) the [Software Engineering](https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/) site. 3. **Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?** It's too ambiguous to add anything meaningful, and it shows. Many tagged questions don't actually cover "programming paradigms" or "best practices" but cover a range of topics such as: * https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46002096/mulesoft-raml-validation-before-custom-policy (about "Mulesoft policies") * https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45960863/importing-sap-wsdl-with-vs17-custom-tool-warning-the-following-policy-asserti (about "policy assertions" in Visual Studio) * https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45776311/allowing-a-lambda-function-to-exclusively-put-objects-into-an-s3-bucket (about "Amazon Web Services bucket policies") * https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45112343/errorawarepolicy-in-cassandra-java-driver (about a type of "LoadBalancingPolicy" in Cassandra) 4. **Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?** The examples above show that it doesn't. And, more pressing... There are many questions with the [tag:policy] tag might be considered "off-topic" as they talk about using different APIs within the rules of their respective Privacy Policies or Terms of Service (ex: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45735242/this-mobile-app-may-violates-instagrams-policies). Since many of the questions that are currently tagged with [tag:policy] don't actually follow the tag usage guidelines and that the tag doesn't mean the same thing in all contexts, I suggest burnination.