The website linked above doesn't mention 'raildust'. Almost all new cars are transported by rail from the manufacturers.
Raildust is the fog of tiny, hot particles of steel that get tossed up by railcars as they roll along the track. Sometimes these glowing hot grains of steel start fires around the tracks, and they can easily melt right thru clearcoat. Of course, later, the microscopic particles embedded in the clearcoat begin to rust.
If you ended up with a vehicle with severely oxidized paint, raildust was often the cause back in the very early years of clearcoat. It continues to some extent even now.
Today, most rail transport cars have more complete coverage and screens to help keep raildust from damaging the clearcoat of the vehicles inside the railcar. But even so, new cars will sit for weeks sometimes in a railyard and are subject to hot raildust falling on the paint.
This is not the same thing as peeling due to poor quality paint or poor application methods, but some of those pictures above look like raildust damage to me.
BTW...that failed paint on the Harley was not caused by UV or clearcoat failure....its something else. Possibly a bad aftermarket paint job...Harley has some of the best paint and methods in the industry. To my eye, it looks more like fuel damage and sanding, on sub-standard paint...but hard to tell for sure.