Key:no:*

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Public-images-osm logo.svg Prefix no:*
ProhibitionSign2.svg
Description
Namespace for features that don't exist but have a high probability to be re-added by a non surveyed edit. Show/edit corresponding data item.
Group: lifecycle
Used on these elements
may be used on nodesmay be used on waysmay be used on areas (and multipolygon relations)may be used on relations
Useful combination
See also
Status: in use
taginfo: no:*

information sign

This page describes a key prefix rather than a simple key.

Description

The no: lifecycle prefix can be added to tags that relate to features that don't exist but have an high probability to be re-added by a non surveyed edit because they can be seen on commonly used imagery or import sources. In most cases, in OSM, if you find a object in the database that don't exist on the ground, whether it existed or not, is an error or not, you should just delete it. But in some rare circumstances, when those features still appear in outdated sources still used to enter data in osm (old imagery, import sources, etc.) you can use this tag to warn other mappers not to re-add those features.

How to tag

Add the namespace "no:" to all keys which are no longer relevant to the current state of an object without changing the geometry (let it a node if it was a node, a way if it was a way). You should treat all the tags on an object as a set of facts about the object, and prefix the keys of those facts which are no longer true as a result of being non existent.

Adding a note=* to explain why you just didn't delete the geometry is highly recommended, else, someone might just delete everything again.

Why use?

This tag might be later used to detect intersection with other geometries to detect added feature that shouldn't have been re-added

Usage of (maybe) similar concepts

  • Key:not:* >20 000 use in db as of 09/2021. This namespace is a way of saying "not to be confused with". Sometimes, a tag is incorrect, but if you simply remove the tag, another mapper may come along later on and add the tag back to the feature, thinking it was missing rather than deliberately removed. Similarly, a feature may not have ever existed in reality, but it may be easy for mappers to think it exists and map it repeatedly.
  • removed:* ~1000 use in the db as of 11/2014. Most tag used are removed:power=* and removed:design=*
  • demolished:* ~1000 use in the db as of 11/2014.
  • demolished_* ~50 use in the db as of 11/2014.
  • no:* ~100 use in the db as of 11/2014.
  • was:* ~4500 use in the db as of 11/2014.
  • was_* ~30 use in the db as of 11/2014.
  • old:* ~200 use in the db as of 11/2014.
  • former_* ~500 former_name and 100 former_* use in the db as of 11/2014.
  • former: ~100 use in the db as of 11/2014.
  • gone:* ~40 use in the db as of 11/2014.

Alternatives for the purpose of this tag

It should be possible to use the history of deleted objects to detect if they are re-added by someone. However no practical tools to query history have been made available. Therefore, this solution is a temporary workaround that could later be replaced by history based comparison.

Notes could be added to warn people not to add deleted objects.

Possible tagging mistakes

If you know places with this tag, verify if it could be tagged with another tag.
Automated edits are strongly discouraged unless you really know what you are doing!

See also