"Online" degree from accredited state university in USA: acceptable in Taiwan?

I'm finishing up my bachelor's degree online. Specifically, I have 4 years of on-campus college prior to this, which resulted in some superfluous university credits and a full associate's degree worth of credits (and of course an associate's degree) from an also accredited community college (all in the same US state). I've read that Taiwan and its ESL industry frown upon "online degrees" but am unclear what this means. Many if not most students in the USA as far as I can tell take at least *some* courses online in their college career, even if they live on campus. It's just convenient for a variety of situations. I also happen to be taking *some* of the courses online: all of the ones specific to my major that I hadn't already accrued by happenstance during general education/the associate's degree portion. I've spent literally 4 years in college classrooms and a lot of those credits will be applied to this degree, even after this switch to a distance learning program/major change. Roughly half of the 4 year degree will have been earned in-person.

Practically speaking, is this even an "online" degree for their purposes? Do they mean just schools such as DeVry and the like? And if not, how would they even know? It isn't going to say on my degree that I was taking courses exclusively online at the time I completed and then graduated. There won't be a ratio listed of online-to-campus credits. That's relevant because I've heard through hearsay and references to various broken hyperlinks that they only accept degrees earned at least "50% in-person". But ultimately the documentation is identical to the kind you obtain on-campus. And I don't think transcripts indicate the location where a course was taken or method, though if you can say otherwise about either I'd like to know for sure.

What's the deal with this strange rule? I can just teach somewhere else if I have to, but I've been considering Taiwan especially closely. Is it true that they distinguish between "correspondence degrees" (whatever that is, some definitions equivocate it with distance and others don't) and distance degrees, and only have an issue with the former? I've read different, seemingly contradictory things on all this. I'm thinking that the reason it doesn't make sense to me is probably that I am missing a crucial piece of information here, despite my efforts. So, any advice?... I would especially love to hear from you if you are someone who has a degree that was mostly or entirely earned online and you DO teach ESL in Taiwan.