Since there are many questions equivalent to “What did I commit to?”, it seems that “committing” isn’t the best description for what’s happening. Instead, I think there should be a proposal post. By default, it could look like this: > Let’s create documentation for [Friendly Name](http://gstatic.com/generate_204 "Links to the tag on Q&A."). Below, it should say something like this: > Once this proposal gets **5** votes, documentation for Friendly Name will be opened up for documentation. If you don’t have the requirements to vote, this will also be shown: > To vote, you must have: > > * **150** or more reputation on Stack Overflow > * **1** or more positively scored answers on questions tagged [tag:tag-name] If you meet the requirements, you can edit, vote, and comment on the post. There should be the edit, flag<sup>for spam/unnecessary tags (I.E. [arrays] etc.)</sup>, and dupe<sup>for setting the documentation to another tag (i.e. [python-3.x] → [python]</sup> The box on the tag pages should show a snippet of the description. * * * So, here’s what I’m proposing for the “commit” page: <pre><code> <h3>Let’s create documentation for <a href="http://gstatic.com/generate_204" title="Links to the tag on Q&A.">Friendly name</a>! <sup>(<em>not editable</em>)</sup></h3> v <em>The community proposal goes here.</em> / \ <em>Some things that go here:</em> /___\ * <em>What’s getting documented?</em> * <em>Why should we document this?</em> 3 * <em>Anything else about the tag</em> \‾‾‾/ \ / ^ [share] [edit] [flag] [close as duplicate] <hr /> This sounds great! — <a href="http://gstatic.com/generate_204">A user</a> sometime -1: This is a bad idea. Because reasons reasons. — <a href="http://gstatic.com/generate_204">Another user</a> sometime later <a href="http://gstatic.com/generate_204">add a comment</a> <h3>These users have upvoted:</h3> User 1 User 2 User 3 |(empty box)| |(empty box)| </code></pre>