Are StackOverflow tags a [folksomony](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folksonomy), or a taxonomy, like [Linnaen classification](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linnaean_taxonomy)? If it's a folksomony, the community should have ways to sift through and promote useful classifications that emerge from common use, and there will always be a long tail of low-value tags, a kind of primordial meaning soup from which new terms will emerge. If it's a taxonomy, there should be a serious, formal process around proposing a new category, argued with strong evidence, and an example species, before a [panel of experts](https://www.iczn.org/). Clearly it started as a folksomony, and how else would SO have bootstrapped it in the early days? It has already moved some distance from low-barrier category creation, given the reputation requirement. How far towards a taxonomy and away from a folksomony should it move? You could take it all the way to zoological classification, or have an _Académie Française_ of tags. Those positions are prestigious. The AF even have natty jackets. I'm not sure which organization would provide the natty jackets here. I haven't spent decades in the trenches of StackOverflow editing, but personally, I think it should be more towards the folksomony end. That means not making it too hard to create a new tag, and giving editors ways to deal with the mess of existing ones. Without it, creating new categories for new types of technology becomes an expensive, committee-driven, bureaucratic process. Where does it evolve to? Want to ask a question about an interesting new programming tool, and tag it appropriately? Too bad, you don't have the 3000 rep and haven't gone through the seven-stage approval process. I don't think you're wrong to want a cleaner taxonomy. But I wonder whether a bottom-up community-driven site, with unpaid editors, is a good place for it. I would point out that the personalities who tend to be meta-editors, and worriers about tags, also tend to favour formal taxonomies. I also wonder whether much of the benefit could be gained by simpler editing of new tags, rather than outright gating. I agree with better tools to manage the inevitable folksy mess. Eg merging tags could be a simple action when the tag had below a certain threshold of posts. There are some other usability suggestions in other answers.