Sure, but are you thereby saying there's no difference between basically every funky DJ playing Dennis Ferrer's "Hey Hey" and a whole bunch of DJs who make their name playing a mix of different genres playing Moska's "Nike"?
I mean, I'm not sure how profitable it is to go into this conversation again, but the very fact that funky is already so diverse, already so porous, makes me think that collapsing genre distinctions even further so as to include stuff that funky DJs don't even play is kinda gratuitous.
At some point it's basically saying that UK funky has simply no borders, which I think any actual funky DJ would disagree with - they may not adopt Marcus's "UK productions only" rule but their sets still exhibit a coherent stylistic expression that is very distinct from, say, a Bok Bok set, or a One Man set, or a Ben UFO set - to name three producers responsible for some of my favourite non-funky DJ sets of last year.