Because digitization has made the presentation of quality information quicker and easier than ever.
For that matter, cut out all of the stupid acronyms and cryptic abbreviations. This is 2019, and computers can easily substitute the actual terms. Make it a config option, at least. It would be criminally easy for software to substitute the full wording for "XYZ" or whatever.
Please tell me what the point of notifying me about a tower 32 ft AGL 7 miles from my route is. If you can legitimately justify the existence of that NOTAM, I'm sure many of us will how to your opinion.
Speaking as the guy who has to file NOTAMs for our 5 broadcast facilities, you're right, it's CYA -- but you're C'ing your A against an eye-watering fine from the FCC or FAA (or BOTH) if you DON'T report that one light being out. On a strobed tower, you have to report it within 15 minutes.
In the case of your 32' tower, if I'm reading that NOTAM text right, it's atop a tall hill. The FAA probably says it needs to be NOTAMed on "any failure," so, by golly, you'd better get a NOTAM or get hammered.
I have to report if one single side obstruction light goes out. And yet, one one of my taller towers (700', 1000AGL on Red Mountain in Birmingham), now has a waiver to turn OFF the side lights. Huzzah! Without that waiver, we'd be looking at a horrible fine if I didn't file a NOTAM. For one inky-dinky little side obstruction light.
Another case in point: our 1,300' tower near Cullman, AL, has been under a NOTAM for a very long time. We'd been arguing with the lighting vendor and we're finally (hopefully!) about to get it fixed. All of my side strobes, the big high-intensity lights that you might actually see, were fine and were in sync. 80' above those big flashheads, at the very tippy-top, our medium-intensity AOL strobe was flashing fine, but was out of sync.
That's technically a violation of rules, so we're still under a NOTAM. We've replaced the entire top fixture twice with no success (whence our arguments with the vendor). (Yadda, yadda, I won't bore you with the story.)
So, for my part in adding to the jumble, I most humbly apologize.