Whether digital (or other) noise is common mode or differential has to do with each of the places it gets to, not with where it originates.
If it appears equally on two associated conductors, to a close approximation, then it is common mode at that location. If it appears significantly differently on two associated conductors, then it is differential at that location. "Associated conductors" could refer to the two signal conductors in a balanced signal pair, or to unbalanced signal and return conductors, or to two related internal circuit points, or to AC "hot" and "neutral" conductors, etc.
So the answer is it could be either. It might even be both at once at a single location, as digital noise consists of a great many individual frequency components that are simultaneously present.
Regards,
-- Al
If it appears equally on two associated conductors, to a close approximation, then it is common mode at that location. If it appears significantly differently on two associated conductors, then it is differential at that location. "Associated conductors" could refer to the two signal conductors in a balanced signal pair, or to unbalanced signal and return conductors, or to two related internal circuit points, or to AC "hot" and "neutral" conductors, etc.
So the answer is it could be either. It might even be both at once at a single location, as digital noise consists of a great many individual frequency components that are simultaneously present.
Regards,
-- Al