This is my last word on this discussion. Clearly, by your use of quotes around the word, you believe jitter is a fable, a nonsense word invented by expensive cable manufacturers.
I've been involved in the world of digital audio production for over 20 years. I KNOW that jitter is a real, observable, and measurable phenomenon, an artifact of mediocre D/A converters and RF interference on both the converters themselves and the cables which transmit digital audio. We used to have all kinds of problems with jitter errors in the early days of PC audio production, because the internal sound cards would get bombarded with RF from the CPU and damn near everything else in that box, and our noise floors were horrid. External AD/DA was a must, if you wanted any kind of listenable outcome, but it was also crazy expensive back in 2000, because the only way it was going multichannel was via SCSI, ADAT, or Ethernet. USB 1.0 couldn't handle 8 channels of 24/48 audio, never mind 24/96 or 24/192. Even shielded audio cards were stupid expensive compared to the average Soundblaster.
I've explained what jitter does to the audio signal, and I've linked you to a site where you can go listen to it yourself and draw your own conclusions. If you refuse to believe it exists or that it can be audible, that's on you.