Chiera said:
Regarding tagme and it's pretty sloppy usage I have added a new clause to its wiki some months ago.
This clause is against people who just add the the tag but without doing anything else on the post regarding gentags:
"Do also not use it when you find a badly tagged post. Instead, try to tag it as well as you can first. If you still think that tagme is needed afterwards, add it."
This is pretty easy to understand. If you can add tagme to a post then you can also add some gentags, too. The purpose is not that one person then goes through all posts tagged with tagme at once but we all have an interest in well tagged posts.
So it would be really nice if not only tagme is added but also some gentags, too. Because at the time when I go through these posts it the post could already be well tagged and that would reduce everyne's workload then ^-^.
So, then what happens when we find a poorly tagged post? Simply leave it? Because here's my thought process, and this goes the same for a handful of other users:
If we see a poorly tagged post, and we go "wow that's pretty badly tagged despite this image being so information-rich", yet we don't have the time, energy, and blood to sacrifice tagging it, then here are our options:
- 1. Tag it tagme, or tag it *something*. Let it be known that someone thought this image could use better tagging even beside our knowledge (or lack thereof).
- 2. Leave it alone for the next poor soul to have a hard time finding.
I see (2) as much more problematic as (1). You let this go on for long enough, and let's see:
-status:deleted gentags:<10 age:..1month: 415
Given, some of these can't be tagged any better than they are already. However, there are a handful of outliers I can spot on the first few pages that I could easily bump to 25+ tags had I cared about them.
Nobody monitors these as often as they should. There is some content that remains difficult to find out of undue action and lack of diligence from the original uploader. And yet tagme, as per its use on literally every other imageboard, is the tag used to pool these images somewhere for some gardeners to tag. Where then, would they find what else to tag? Do we make these searches recommended in that tag wiki? How do they even know about this knowledge now if they don't watch the wiki or tag edits?
This change has happened with little to no input (given I've only seen one reply bumping support for it), and as such I disagree with its nature. I would withhold slipping in clauses that describe a potentially unwanted change, especially if that makes it more difficult for users such as myself to "mark" posts that need better effort put in.
Or come up with an alternate tag that better distinguishes the use you intend it to have.
EDIT: More importantly this doesn't solve the original problem of reducing bad tagging, it just shoves responsibility onto someone else -- in this case the viewer. That it is their lack of diligence that is the problem with the proliferation of this tag, not ourselves.
Most non-contributors aren't great taggers. And if they are, they haven't cared to put enough effort in. This is given, since there's little to no incentive to do so when one could always default the excuse "I don't know any better." The problem has always been encouraging users to be diligent (in addition to making the gallery easier to search), not trying to rally users to do someone else's job. Inevitably they do, but they receive near to no credit for that kind of work.