Hey Mattia, > […]
You make a number of fair points and many of them have changed the colour how I feel about this. For example, you are right to highlight that if a tag exists even for a day then it can have remarkable impact. I would still insist that it is regrettable that users hesitate before asking or file bugs but, amongst other things, being 'right' is not the same as being effective. I would like to add three further bit of nuance from my perspective. Firstly, one elementary observation that has to be made is that there is always going to be a severe observation bias towards new tags which are problematic in some way. For obvious reasons we never discuss tags that we add which nobody disagrees with, particularly when they have few false positives. Secondly, it is quite demotivating to see Lintian bugs (ie. quite literally errors in the logic, not tags that are opinionated in any way) being discussed on debian-devel with the unstated assumption that the current state of Lintian is how it now will be for all time. Note that it is not possible to categorise these contributors as "not being annoyed enough" given that, res ipsa loquitur, they would not have posted in to a public list in the first instance, unless they were answering to some obscure psychological need. Lastly, it is easy to ask that the Lintian maintainers are more circumspect before adding tags, but there will always be things that we simply do not know and connections we don't even know we are not making. We will always implicitly rely on the submitter of the wishlist bug to have done some of this thinking especially as they are likely quite knowledgable in their domain. We also rely to a lesser degree on extremely kindly people (such as yourself, which you have done many times to great effect) to add comments on outstanding requests and ask these extremely important "oh, did you think of…?" questions. To be explicit, it did not remotely occur to me that backports would be affected by this tag and it is likely that no deeper analysis or long walks in the countryside would have made me think of it. Whether this says something about my suitability to be a maintainer of this tool is for others to say. Anyway, this is perhaps not the right venue for this valuable discussion, so whilst we should continue to think and talk about this let us now move on to addressing the specifics of this particular tag. I would like to do a Lintian release today, so given that a) I was led to believe skipping the tag for backports uploads would be sufficient and b) that I would not like to leave the resolution of this bug for another release, I would like to make the concrete proposal that we remove this tag (or possibly, mark it as pedantic, experimental, and add a suitable note to the long description). Would you concur? Regards, -- ,''`. : :' : Chris Lamb `. `'` la...@debian.org 🍥 chris-lamb.co.uk `-