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this post was submitted on 02 Aug 2023
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You're right that we have precise ways to say this, but people like seeing bigger numbers rather than smaller ones, and most people aren't "precise" about anything.
It's a relative metric, not an absolute one. And since they're using the word "lighter" (i.e. less massive) it means that they're talking about the reciprocal of mass.
I.e. 1/5 the mass = 5 times "lighter"
If something is 50% the mass of something else, you could say the the heavier one is twice as heavy as the light one. Which means that the light one is two times "lighter" than the heavy one.
But I agree with your sentiment, relative comparisons of reciprocals is confusing at the best of times.
It's not the word "lighter" that's the issue, it's the word "less". If I say something weighs 80% less, ... you know how much that is. 100% less, it weighs even less -- nothing at all. 500% less (i.e. 5 times less), suddenly it weighs more?