Understandable and accepted. However this issue is part of a much bigger problem endemic to our society right now. EMC is a very specialised field, which even many average electrical and electronic engineers have only touched the tip of the iceberg. At consumer level detailed knowledge isn't required - as long as that contingent has access to the information it needs to remedy the issues at hand.
I only persist because we are rapidly approaching a tipping point whereupon the effects of the lack of market surveillance and enforcement will begin to affect large numbers of people. Getting a handle on this early may prevent widespread problems later. For folk in the countryside this is much less an issue (unless of course they are being affected by their own equipment) but in densely populated areas the aggregation of interference sources can build up to problematic levels quickly; consider high rise flat as one example at the extreme end of the chart.
The aim is simple; help and mitigate where necessary and prevent if possible. The more widely known this problem is the better it will be for everyone in the end. LED interference to FM, DAB and broadband is already more common than might first appear from a casual search of the internet.
Let's face it, no one wants their broadband compromised by their own electronics, much less someone else's. I already know of two cases of compromised broadband where a neighbour is responsible and refuses to do anything. You might be surprised to learn that overcoming such a scenario is much harder than you first think.
Best wishes.



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