Bhargav's busy, Cody's not about right now etc... and we've been a little lapse about things recently.
So I thought, let's just thrash it out, someone that has direct communication to the CM team if necessary that cares about stuff and the community that cares
Ok yeah the burniation needs some new Rene sede magic so we can review max 100-200 questions, meta is all in to upvote'em but very few are actually interested to review..
mark the room as gallery and any one of a few people are ROs and can come in here and post something, and you (or another mod) comes in and checks it every few days?
I want to identify 1) the ones that require bulk removal that have been around for a while - we can just clean up the spillage and 2) the ones that need careful curating
@TylerH I haven't thought it through yet... this is an idea gathering process... not a rule based one.
Oops, manager is calling me for a brainstorming session. I'll leave this tab open but will be AFK probably til the meeting is over. Feel free to @ me as necessary for followup requests
@JonClements Other than # questions, what criteria should we be using to differentiate between just removing the tag and cleaning up questions while removing the tag (general question)?
@JonClements I'd intended to indicate that my question was a general topic, not one I expected you to have an immediate answer to, but that didn't communicate.
Yeah, we do need some standards. I've been slowly flagging burninates so we know which are still valid, but my flag on this one was declined. So I guess it needs more votes? Discussion?
I think we need to revisit the SEDE query, the mso search and the roommeetings that addressed burninaton. From that we can move forward, specially if we can mark tags for mass-removal as well.
I'm afraid I won't be of much help here. I'm willing to do the queue work on butninations, but rarely feel qualified to do anyhting else (such as retagging)
Maybe we should have two categories: Mass removal and full burnination. Then we can take on a larger burn that takes a few weeks maybe while in the mean-time mass-removals are executed. That keeps it going.
and then a second level of - analyse a bit using SEDE - if a tag's pretty useless but appears on 90%+ of questions with another tag - we'll just merge them
so I guess what I'm saying is - let's put together something we then work through as a team?
There is also an associated category: clean-up. A process for that category isn't clearly defined, but it's similar to burnination, but without the goal of fully removing the tag (i.e. not mass removed, not edited out, except where clearly inappropriate, etc.), but where off-topic questions are cleaned. If we're revisiting how things are defined, it would be good to have a clear definition/process for "clean-up".
@JonClements Could I suggest an easy one to start with? I never got traction on this retag and every time I check carbon there's new mistagged questions
@Machavity sure... but I'm only offering myself as a service to have someone at the end of the line that can mass delete and to be here to act as a coordinator for prioritised requests on behalf on the SOCVR team.
probably we need some idea from "he who must be named" if it is good to keep marker (tag) or SO has greater benefit from just removing it to hopefully stop new stuff, give a feeling that the meta posts have sense and concentrate effort on new stuff. We then will try to find a query to review a minimal amount before mass removal
Ok...Things I think would be useful if better coordinated:
1. Get rid of burninate requests that are stupid. This means EVERY SINGLE REQUEST that builds on that damn "no one is an expert at this" rationale. Tags are bad because they're ambiguous or somehow harm the site, not because some random jackass never stepped outside of their web-dev cave.
2. Identify tags that primarily need disambiguation: tag would be good but means two completely different things (NOT two mostly-the-same things in two different contexts). These can be automated to a high degree, but folks get lost talking about burnination when they need to be figuring out a disambiguation strategy.
3. Cleanup. Deleting hundreds of closed, downvoted questions isn't hard - or particularly essential to the process. Finding hundreds of off-topic questions in an obscure tag no one has ever tried to dig through is. Migrating or closing is. Editing really is.
@JonClements is there a concise list somewhere that details what a CM can do and what a mod can do WRT to tag stuff on a large scale? I know it's a common source of confusion on meta
1. Tons of tag editing while the topic is still being discussed. I can make a tag as though it never existed; any of you could script a tag removal for a few hundred tags. Stuff is hard 'cause it needs judgement, not warm bodies mindlessly clicking.
2. Hand-wringing about a tag with 5 questions in it. Probably still a stupid request, but either do it or don't.
Stuff I can and would be willing to help with:
1. Mass tag removal 2. Mass tag disambiguation 3. Mass question deletion
Stuff I don't have time for but wish I did: declining more stupid burninate requests.
@JonClements so you want a data analytics web app built with Python that can let us cross reference all sorts of info from SEDE dumps of questions, eh? We can call it SOQUEEN - Stack Overflow QUEstion Examination and Neutralization
I wrote up my thoughts on when burnination is useful a couple years back. Haven't really changed my mind on any of that. Any help applying it is greatly appreciated.
what I want to achieve here is not necessarily re-writing the rules, but actually, putting them to better use if we can, and actually do something worthwhile, using the resources everyone has to do so, rather than waste everyone's time
@Shog9 let's put the big old ones we can't expect the community to have a hope in hell of re-tagging to bed if they're useless tags - clear those off our plate
@JonClements You mentioned something earlier about identifying simple requests and those that need a lot of work. I think it would be useful to start bifurcating the process when it becomes apparent that a tag is problematic primarily due to ambiguity - stuff like that damn angular mess that hung around so long.
yup - indeed - that's not as simple as a burnination or a re-tag - that's a huge amount of work
what I'm trying to engage in here is community involment - let's step up to the plate - kill off the easy pickings and start focusing on stuff that needs work
Stuff like the "user" tag we burned earlier - that's a bad tag, but the harm is pretty minimal. The "web" tag comes up every now and then for the same reason, and also doesn't really cause much harm. It's worth keeping an eye on those, but unless they reach some vague threshold of "doing more harm than good" it's not really worth thinking about too much.
But tags where a ton of folks are using them and getting frustrated 'cause they keep seeing questions from folks who think they're about something else... Those are the situations where we're the weakest right now, I think.
I almost think we need to migrate our burnination process to a prior process where we determine what step is appropriate - burnination, cleanup, disambiguation, etc.
The big, common, mostly-meaningless tags... Those requests get a ton of attention 'cause they're bikeshed colors - everyone can have an opinion without much thought. How to sort out tagging for two libraries that have the same name but do different stuff differently on different platforms... Those get icky and few people want to really wade in.
...But those are the ones that do a lot of good if someone takes the time to sort it out
If we're gonna ramp up activity here, I'd like to find a way to spend more effort on the latter.
@Shog9 problem with that is that you actually need knowledge of both libraries and platforms. I for one have a very narrow programming mindset, and anything outside that sounds like hogwash to me.
This is why I so rarely find time for them, unfortunately; most of the work in disambiguation isn't actually retagging, it's learning enough to know which questions need to be retagged.
This involved under 1000 questions... But it took me the better part of an afternoon to actually figure out which questions needed which tags.
I like TylerH's idea of having an initial "strategy planning" phase that simply determines which path is worth proceeding on (if any): rename, disambiguate, burninate, etc.
ugh.... I was going to set a schedule for Tuesday, but the system tells me: Because you are a moderator there, an event that you schedule in this room may be advertised on and tweeted by the site's Twitter account. - so I won't... if someone else can though :p
Good to see folks willing to help. Have a good night y'all
@JonClements the twitter thing is bogus. There'll be an event created on-site, but you can just delete it (/admin/links ... something something community events)
(some of this stuff dates back to when Twitter had a good API and also when Twitter didn't think deleting fake accounts meant randomly deleting accounts that were used as event publishing for websites)