Okay Boyd, fair enough...maybe "blasting" was not the best word, but it is a complaint and I don't see it. I have many RCBS dies and in the beginning, just like the entire rest of the world of new reloaders, I set my dies up exactly the way you are referring to. 1/4 turn cam over yadda, yadda. Back then I don't know of any die makers that didn't say to do it that way.
The RCBS Precision Mic was also one of the first tools I acquired for my reloading bench somewhere along about 1989 or 90 that was not really required to just make ammo. Not sure what year RCBS came out with the tool, but it had to be not too long before that. I shoot a lot and I have shot a lot of different calibers over the years. I reload for all of them and pretty early on I realized how important it was to have the case fit the chamber properly. I wasn't long getting the tooling to be able to check case length on everything.
In all those years I have only ever had one or two dies that did not properly full length size cases within SAAMI spec using the method you are crying about. I have a few that wouldn't go enough, so I ground off the bottom of the die. Sometimes this was caused by using a different brand shell holder. The one that made cases too short was returned and replaced for free.
The point being, I started reloading in 1980 and to this day I have not ruined or seen any premature damage to any brass I have resized or otherwise used that I can contribute to RCBS dies, the way they are manufactured or the way they advocate setting them up. If you use this set up and are losing cases due to case body failure then you need a gunsmith to correct your rifle, not a video to sell you a measuring tool.
Any given manufacturer produces and sells their product, they all offer tech support to help use whatever it may be. Ask them a question and they will answer it. But they cant really be held accountable for the further education of how far each end user needs to take it.