In 1985, Harmuth wrote that Maxwell's equations are incompatible with causality, and overcame the problem by adding a term for magnetic dipole currents, and as a consequence the problem of infinite zero-point energy and renormalization disappears. At least according to Harmuth's book:
The foreword is readable at Calculus of finite differences in quantum electrodynamics, by Henning F. Harmuth, Beate Meffert. The modified Maxwell equations read (page 3):
$$ \begin{aligned} \mathrm{curl}\,\boldsymbol H&=\frac{\partial\boldsymbol D}{\partial t}+\boldsymbol g_e\\ -\mathrm{curl}\,\boldsymbol E&=\frac{\partial\boldsymbol B}{\partial t}+\boldsymbol g_m\\ \mathrm{div}\,\boldsymbol D&=\rho_e\\ \mathrm{div}\,\boldsymbol B&=0\quad\text{or}\quad\mathrm{div}\,\boldsymbol B=\rho_m \end{aligned} $$
Are Harmuth's modifications generally accepted by the physics community as a more accurate description of reality than the unmodified equations?