> And then your next question is "does the Chinese gov't really care about a > linux distro having a Taiwanese or Tibetan flag in some programs it ships?" > and the answer to that question is yes, very much. > > So, of course does this mean we are siding with china? No, we're not siding > with anyone, that's the whole point. > > Flags mean a lot to a lot of people. They carry a lot of patriotic crap > w/them. But what is the official internationally recognized status of Taiwan ? If that's a part of china, then it's not an actual country, then we can remove its flag. If that's an independent country, then it has a flag, and we can use it. I really wonder why we are trying to solve those geopolitical international issues. Those are for the governments and the UN to solve. They agree on a list of officially recognized countries, and we use it. I really can't understand where the problem comes from :-/ Are there countries not agreeing with each others regarding the official status of other countries (not like country A says country B is inside country A, but rather country A and country B disagree on the status of country C) ? Are there countries that disagree with the UN regarding the official status of a "geographic area" ? ---------- Mathieu Bridon (bochecha) -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list