Hmmm, the rationale for factoring live loads and dead loads remains in place whatever their nature. So except the code makes explicit exception, the ordinary safety factors should be employed.
As an example; floors made of just a plate of concrete, here, Spain. Everyone knows that with proper caution on not exceeding the thickness, the load rarely will exceed the normative value. Yet anyway a on dead load safety factor of 1.35 must be used factoring the loads.
Now, a structural code is a system of getting in reliable way a targeted level of safety, and any works on the scope of one should be following its clauses.
There is another important aspect of codes, comparing them and their practical effects, tu pursue betterment of construction.
Separate clauses use also to be used where no extant enforceable information is standing, always caring of the way of application and the intent, being then basically another source of technical information explicitly sanctioned by some government or technical body.