Knowledge_Seeker said:
And allow me to counter all of that with a very simple question: How exactly do you plan to prevent further mistags? Playing whack-a-mole with mistags is only going to get you so far when this tag keeps getting added to more and more invalid posts. And considering how much of a mess these tags are to begin with, I see such a feat as outright impossible, honestly.
The superior option remains deprecation, in my opinion, as this tag is beyond saving from the looks of things. Even if we are to assume people immediately adding the first "light_b" tag in the autocomplete plays a role (a point I will admittedly concede as playing a role in things), it doesn't change the fact that "light brown" is inherently a color shade which the definition of varies from person to person. With the end result being blonde hair and even just plain brown hair being lumped together under light brown hair, which helps absolutely no one. At least people can agree on a basic color half the time, compared to these light/dark hair tags.
I already explained my plan earlier in the thread, but I do realize to choose examples to reinforce proper tagging, people need to agree on where the boundaries lie. I now see that the problem with the wiki is that the posts are median examples, so there would be some subjectivity involved (especially with display differences and all).
When I tag, I simply consider whether the post looks closer to the light brown hair example than the brown hair or blonde hair example (which wouldn't help for red hair or grey hair, but I didn't feel like I had problems with those either). Specifically, I equated light brown with tan. But I haven't run into too many borderline examples, so maybe I just don't have much experience with the inherent challenge of tagging those edge cases.
I can't help but wonder if the reason this BUR is receiving such pushback is less due to their usefulness and more due to how deeply entrenched tags like this are, making, to many people, getting rid of them unthinkable. On the one hand, I understand that. But on the other, just because it's existed for a long while doesn't mean it's good. And as far as I can see, they are only muddling attempts to search for proper hair colors and even if we are to assume light brown hair is a proper hair shade (which I think the tag's severe misuse proves is false), good luck finding them amongst the sea of blonde and brown hair.
For me, I felt that the examples in the wiki were distinct enough, and that the arguments against it were focusing on mistags that no one paying attention would actually make. The examples of every color under the rainbow being mistagged did not sound to me like something caused to a problem with that tag specifically, and my attempts to garden it only reinforced this view. I think we should be restricting this discussion to the issues that can't be attributed to autocorrect or Relevant Tags.
AngryZapdos said:
The silver_hair BUR got plenty of downvotes, and yet was approved for much the same reasons. Just because people like using the tag doesn't mean it's a good tag. That tag, by the way, still hasn't been fully cleared out to this day; I shudder to think how many more posts it would have been added to in that time had it been left usable.
I just looked through those arguments and I can respect the logic. Considering that there have been good arguments for removing such tags in the past, I changed my vote to a Neutral. However, the silver hair tag did have issues the light brown hair tag doesn't have such as shininess and the weird age requirement thing. I still think it's possible to restrict light brown hair in a way to make it usable, but I agree getting rid of silver hair was the right decision.
Considering the sorry state this tag is in, implying it to brown_hair would be nothing short of mass tag vandalism. I thank my lucky stars this isn't already the case, because then the thousands of blonde and grey mistags would be poisoning brown_hair too.
I meant after the tag was sufficiently gardened. Though as Knowledge Seeker pointed out, it won't do any good unless we are able to prevent more mistags.
Please keep that argument for a different thread that is actually about hair streak colors.
My argument wasn't about streak tags. The argument I was making was that some of these claimed mistags could be due to a hair color being present but only minimally so, which would make it eligible for the tag even if it's not obvious at first glance. The same logic can apply for characters in the background, too.