Here's a couple of videos that explain what is happening here. Cheap LED bulbs are more likely to have this problem than better designed and made ones.
Steve Mould - The cheap Chinese bulb that won't turn off https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uEmX5XClPY
ElectroBOOM - Why Cheap LED Lights Keep Glowing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bgUy6zA0ts
So, the takeaway seems to be that it's because the bulb is a really cheap LED, and it's glowing off of the small amount of current leaking through to the ground wiring, even when off. Correct?
Yeah that's pretty much it. The circuit does not have enough resistive load to draw real power (Watts) and it capacitively couples to ground or the return path through some sort of phantom capacitor and only draws reactive power (Vars, volt-amps reactive). That phantom capacitor is likely the length of wire between the lamp and the switch which is disconnected/off. The very low leakage current is apparently enough to light the bulb in this manner. Pretty crazy, huh?
I need to look into this. I just had two fluorescent tubes (in the same room) doing this; they were flickering lightly like they were about to light up every two/three seconds. They were also wired to ground and they stopped flickering (when off) when I removed the ground. Most other lights don't have ground so I don't know if it is safe or not.
Fluorescent lights affect the brain negatively.
LED light over my stove does this....
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