On April 25, China's Civil Aviation Administration sent a letter sent to at least 36 foreign airlines demanding they change their references to Taiwan.
The move was unprecedented, and led to the White House reportedly urging airlines to defy the order and publicly slamming it as "Orwellian nonsense."
Despite the political pushback, dozens of airlines have altered their websites for fear of receiving marks against their company social-credit score if they did not comply, and potentially losing access to what will soon be the largest air-travel market on the planet.
Qantas, Air France, Air Canada, British Airways, and Malaysia Airlines all changed their descriptions of Taiwan.
Eventually, Japan Airlines and ANA did so too, but only introduced the "Taiwan, China" descriptor on their Chinese-language sites. This could potentially prove a viable model for other companies, but Chinese state media has criticized the idea.