In fact, copper connections are extremely unreliable - the slightest interference due to low-quality wires or dirt and high frequencies drop here. At the same time, the cable length is extremely limited.
Optical connectors are much more reliable, moreover, they are galvanically isolated from the PC power system and eliminate accidental electrical breakdown of the circuits.
An optical link can pass through much higher frequencies and multiple modulation, the bandwidth there is potentially 100 times higher. At the same time, the cable length is an order of magnitude greater, at a minimum, which can provide almost complete silence under high load on a dgpu or other powerful equipment connected via an optical channel, by moving the noisy equipment to another room or a special utility room at home (or at work).
All desktop video cards must be connected via optics - only power via copper.
In addition, a powerful optical communication channel can be simultaneously used to dock all peripherals on the desktop using different ports (already electrical). This potentially allows you to remove the system unit altogether from the desktop to the utility room of the house. There are only monitors on the desk, peripherals and complete silence while working... isn't that what we all strive for?
Why does the industry continue to kick the dead carcass of electrical connections, instead of switching to high-speed optical links, which also exclude electrical breakdown due to the excellent galvanic isolation of power circuits? I do not see any technical or cost problem in 2024 for a mass transition to long-range optical communication channels for high-speed external equipment.