The Gnome NetStatus Applet uses these icons to show if data is being
sent or received.  The Gnome Network Monitor does not use this idle icon
to show the wired connection status (it's distinct from
'networkwired.png'), which I think is your concern.

If the idle icon is the same as the transmit-receive icon, the applet is
not providing the desired information (is the network idling or is it
active?).  Other standard themes distinguish these two icons, usually by
indicating activity in either direction (transmit or receive) with a
distinct 'on' symbol, such as light on a monitor, c.f. the human icon
theme, where the network-wired icon is used rather than network-idle:

http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~ubuntu-branches/ubuntu/maverick/human-icon-
theme/maverick/download/head%3A/networkwired.png-20100331141318-n6ylp4tkw1yysi69-18
/network-wired.png

http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~ubuntu-branches/ubuntu/maverick/human-icon-
theme/maverick/download/head%3A/networktransmitrecei-20091205110421-6zee3ly4x0w9rb46-357
/network-transmit-receive.png

The Humanity theme's icons for 'transmit only' or 'receive only' instead
designate the absence of signal in the opposing direction by cutting the
alpha of that part of the symbol, and this should hold true for the idle
icon (as in my patch).  The concern that this suggests a disabled state
is mitigated by it's use in the netstatus applet, and typically frequent
switches between the idle and active states.

The alternative for this theme is to have fully opaque components
represent inactivity, and use a colour (or some other symbol change) to
denote activity, but this is not particularly desirable.

-- 
network-idle icon links to (is the same as) network-transmit-receive.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/611336
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