stevea
(Stevea)
27
Mmmm, mostly true, I’ll say, but not necessarily always true. Many people forget a significant amount of imported TIGER data were railway=rail, and while they were “fairly noisy,” (with what are now well-understood and surmountable limitations, thanks to newer tags like owner=* and operator=*) they were also “good enough” to have become seriously improved over the last 15 years: today these data are now “pretty decent and still improving.” It is estimated TIGER-imported rail data (in the USA, of course, that’s the only place we have such data) are approximately 75% completely reviewed, but that is a “compromise estimate.” It remains difficult to derive hard numbers about this, because the data have spent 15 years getting both “smeared” and “deliberately improved,” resulting in “much, much better data, but messy as to a measurable value of their actual level of improvement since import.”
In the rail examples I gave, the tiger:cfcc turned out to be quite helpful to make determinations between things like rail mainlines, sidings, industrial spurs and other similarly and quite distinctly taggable ways in OSM — and so they largely have been. This is the best example I can think of for “hey, don’t delete a tiger:* tag until you’re 100% certain there are absolutely no more use cases where semantic value can be ‘wrung out’ of them.” (Imagine a slightly-damp washcloth that you think of as containing “no more moisture” and you twist and squeeze it as hard as you can and get a few more precious drops of fluid). I’m pretty sure we have neither imagined fully nor squeezed out all of the semantic value that (still) might remain in tiger:= tagging. It’s just plain difficult to “fully imagine” all the possible use cases where semantic value might be extracted before the final “goodnight” of deletion happens.
And that is (just) for tiger:cfcc. (Which I’ll be the first to say, is actually a fairly useful tag, at least for what I did with some rail data improvements). Other tiger:= tags? Well, please chime in here and now, everyone.