I agree.
I was making some of the same points you were.
To clarify:
Some phytoplankton and diatoms is good; 0 is bad.
Manipulating lighting will only take you so far and not very far at that and wont permanently end a glass or substrate algae problem.imo though it might reduce it a bit for a while but at a cost to photosynthetic organisms in general.
In my case, it's not a problem; just sharing an observation.
It would have been easy to conclude the new light causes the glass to be "dirtier" and therefore the tank less healthy and extrapolate that to point where reducing light or playing with spectra became the first reach to keep algae at bay but that's not the case imo. Nutrient control is.
Further,controlling nutrients doesn't mean eliminating them or phytoplankton as far as I'm concerned .Zero N and P is not the goal despite the approaches taken in so called Ultra Low Nutrient Systems( a meaningless term).
Getting the right balance between imports( foods etc) and exports, removal media, skimming, mechanical filtration,etc in a specific aquarium is the goal.
Just getting to a point where the aquarium looks good and levels of inorganic N and P don't harm the organisms or cause a lot of unsightly invasive nuisance algae is what I aim for. In my case, it's around .03ppm PO4 and 0.02ppm NO3.
I really don't think reeftank water should be sterilized(uv, ozone, hydrogne peroxide, etc) since many of the effects on the biology of the tank and the organics in it including the availability of organics to bind free toxic metals may have some undesireable long term effects.
Just one other anecdote on uvs.
I did try a large one 39watt on a 29 gallon quarantine tank. Don't care about organics there and figured sterilizing the water ,even in the recirculating system might help with a relatively high radiation rate and pass through rate.
I was surprised by the heat; the temp wouldn't drop below 83 even with no heater or lights , an open top and ambient room temperature of 70.
So simply running a larger uv to kill larger organisms like crytocaryon irritans that pass through it can easily pose temp problems particularly in a sensitive qt situation and temp should be monitored if a large unit relative to tank size is used.
Even if it was large enough to kill the parasites passing through it,it would never touch those on surfaces or in the fish and that bunch would take up the slack, although a temporary density reduction might be helpful .