As I understand it, that’s exactly what Digitize the Planet does.

Each country or even each federal state can and does have its own rules, which should be taken into account individually, but should be mapped in a standardized syntax. This is not easy and requires a lot of research and community involvement.

In Vorarlberg, I work very closely with the Vorarlberg state office and the Vorarlberg tourism office and together we have mapped the protected areas there and tried to map the rules there in OSM tags. Many things are possible, but often the attempt to achieve a “We don’t want that” with the “On the Ground” rule of OSM fails. Just because some official body says that something is not wanted (but also not forbidden), this can only be mapped in the OSM data to a limited extent.

Please don’t. access=yes, foot=yes is implicit for all paths. Also, informal=no is like a Troll tag, as it is also considered the default.

As a basic assumption, we already assume that routes that are signposted locally are “official” anyway. There is therefore no need for a special tag to indicate that this is an official route. Only if something is not official can you use informal=yes.

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