So at this point we can basically assume the question wasn’t asked in good faith right? Sigh, this is the Internet I suppose.
Instead I think that the question was legitimate and was posted on perfectly good faith.
When I did buy my fist computer (just 15 months ago) I had the same doubt as the OP, and asked here for clarification.
I got perfectly sensible answers, explaining me why the computer MUST be more conservative than the US Navy tables for a square profile.
In my thread there was no "war", nor "flame". I wondered why the computer (RGBM in my case) was asking for more deco time than the tables, and I got a clear explanation which satisfied me.
The opinion expressed by the OP that the computer "steals away" some bottom time, is due to a typical American mental barrier: you should dive within NDL and must ascend when the NDL limit is approaching.
This is not how we were taught for recreation diving here in Europe. We were taught to plan a dive and dive the plan.
So, if I plan to stay 30 minutes at 30m, I will do just that. Whatever the computer or the tables say, I will follow my plan and stay down for 30 minutes. What changes, depending on conditions, effective diving profile, air consumption and effort, water temperature, etc., is that, arrived at 6m, I will face a shorter or longer deco time. So no bottom time is lost, it is just matter of making some more or less minutes of deco.
Planning these shallow dives with a few minutes of deco is both safer and simpler than trying to "ride the NDL", because "deco is forbidden", or "deco is dangerous".
I again suggest the OP to approach the problem the other way around. Simply ignore the concept of how much NDL time is given you by computer and by table. Always plan your dive with some minutes of deco.
This is NOT Tech Diving, it is normal rec diving, as it should be practised (and is practised on this side of the pond).
Dive your plan. And when at the first deco stop (usually 6m) evaluate how much deco is required both by tables and by the computer. In 99% of cases, the computer will give you less deco. Most people thrust their computer, hence they simply follow that deco times. In the rare case of a very square profile, the computer will ask you to make some more minutes of deco stop. I see no problem and no risk following it, it is just safer than following the table, and it is not shortening at all your bottom time.