No. A reasonable assumption would be geostationary, which is quite possible.
Given the object to be observed serves as the reference point.
Why dont they put a satellite with a camera in a stationary position so it can film the earth being round and not flat...
There is no evidence that will convince a flat earther. They're basically the creationists of planetary geometry.
>in a stationary position
they could put a livestreaming camera on the moon so we could see the earth 24 hours a day
Stationary relative to what?
The simplest but a very cumbersome way to prove roundness would be move a quarter of earths diameter in one direction, turn 90 degrees left, move another quarted diameter, turn 90 degrees left again and move another quarter of earths diameter.
If you ended very near to your starting point start thinking how could that happen?
They have, many, many times. It would be cool though to see stereoscopic cameras posited fairly distant from one another and pointed at the earth to try and get a nice 3D image.