There is an effort under way to enhance glibc so that it can use the
Y2038 support in the kernel.  The result will be that more 32-bit
architectures can use a 64-bit time_t.  (Currently, it's x86-64 x32
only.)

Originally, the plan was to support both ABIs in glibc for building
new applications, similar to what is currently possible with
-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 for changing the size of off_t.  However, this
turned out to be difficult to implement, and so far, no one has posted
patches which appear to be reasonably correct and complete.

The latest proposal is a single-ABI mode for development:

  <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2019-07/msg00433.html>

Old binaries with a 32-bit time_t will continue to run, but new
binaries built against a current glibc will always use a 64-bit time_t
under this approach.

The consequence is that in order to build 32-bit-time_t libraries
(Gtk, for example), an old glibc needs to be kept around.  In
practice, it would probably mean that it is impossible to maintain a
set of 32-bit-time_t libraries in a classic distribution build
environment (with a unified buildroot and native builds).

I do not have a strong opinion about this because I personally do not
care much about 32-bit architectures.

For Fedora, that would affect the i686 architecture only.  Given that
i686 is kept around mainly for legacy applications these days, without
a kernel and installation media, I expect that Fedora prefers
compatibility with 32-bit time_t applications.  The latest proposal
(64-bit time_t only for new applications) would therefore be
problematic to Fedora.
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