If you aren't breaking any laws transmitting like that in International Waters, why call it BREAKTHELAW and call out that use case? If you are breaking laws transmitting like that in International Waters, why would this setting be called out as specifically useful in International Waters?
Neither seems to make sense. (And does this come from the Microsoft team who came up with
It doesn't make sense to call the same option multiple things for such a small number of use cases; you really want the last thing, but someone might not know that in _many_ circumstances it could be against the law to use it, hence the prefix to document that.
Edit: ALSO, in case it wasn't clear... E.G. wifi_regulations=USA or wifi_regulations=CDN or wifi_regulations=GBR or some other set of country codes / match in the table of known regulations. A longer string that manually specifies allowed frequencies in some way might also work.
Neither seems to make sense. (And does this come from the Microsoft team who came up with
?)