Bob,
If I understand the FCC rules, a device such as these active antennas that causes interference to a service such as GPS that operates in an exclusive protected frequency space, would have to be removed from the market. There are permissible limits for interference, but the distances are meaured in inches or at most a foot or two. The best example of this is police radar detectors. Some of the early models generated frequencies in the 950-1450 MHz area that interfered with some cellular services as well as L-band satellite modems. The FCC forced the manufacturers to withdraw them from the market. It doesn't mean they all go away, it just means that they can no longer be sold.
My Lowrance GPS has always been sensitive to marine radar. They have since improved the shielding in the antenna electronics assembly, but on my current model, if I get too close to one of the Alaska ferries with its radar operating, the GPS goes off line.