The way the FM Band has been "jammed" with Docket 80-90 stations, translators, LPFMs, international drop ins, and IBOC sidebands, you could regard it as a form of jamming. Especially with translators, there have been many cases of competitors putting a translator on a frequency that interferes with a competitors' signal in a fringe area of service that used to be clear. Stations in neighboring markets with similar formats used to compete with larger market stations, regularly shaving a few tenths of a rating point. Translators have been put on those neighboring market frequencies, obliterating competition. Good receivers used to be able to tune first adjacent signals to fairly strong local signals. Now IBOC sidebands obliterate those, even on the most expensive tuners. This is common for old 3 kW Class As 65 miles away from Metro stations in many markets, and they really get ripped up by IBOC.
There have been around 12 full power stations that have been dropped in near the US Canadian Border near Metro Detroit over the last 25 years or so, on second adjacent frequencies, which use a lot of allotment loopholes in the US Canada Agreement. This does not theoretically cause interference to US stations around Detroit, that compete with US stations in Canada, which is fine and dandy, but they de facto interfere with neighboring market fringe area signals which used to be clear.