* Adam Borowski <kilob...@angband.pl>, 2016-06-24, 17:32:
I have no idea what you are referring to here, but it reminds me to
say that I think the name "mutt-kz" is a NO-GO. I know it's from the
authors initials, but… to me it sounds like "mutt-hitler" or probably
worse.
Send complaints to Karel's parents...
Every other two-letter sequence is going to mean something dreadful in
some language. For example, millions[0] of Poles are offended when you
talk about UBSan[1], or MO[2] files, or the .SS macro.
These, like mutt-kz, are pure coincidences. For the original argument
to hold any water, you'd need to find an _intentional_ example.
Like, say, KGB (kgb-{bot,client}). And here, despite it being a vile
murderous organisation (and far more murderous before name change in
1954), I don't see any protests. People see the bot's name as a joke.
And I agree.
What about stalin ("extremely aggressive Scheme compiler")?
I find "kgb-*" a good joke and "stalin" distasteful, but I can't
rationally explain the difference in these gut feelings.
But in either case, I wouldn't go as far as to demand package rename or
removal.
--
Jakub Wilk