@Silverado4x4
Believe what you want. DI engines are a much different animal than previous port injected engines. The higher pressure fuel delivery with DI, especially when the engine is cold will leave liquid drops of fuel in the cylinders especially around the piston rings, liquid fuel does not burn, so it will work its way quicking into the crankcase.
Additional you need to understand the engine coolant temperature and oil warm up behavior of an engine that is just idling from cold start vs driving. See graph below. Cold Start Idle was for 15 minutes, Drive was 17 minutes. Even at 17 minutes of driving the engine oil was only around 175F even though the engine had hit 200F. This was semi rural driving with at best maybe 4 traffic lights and speeds typically between 35-45 MPH. The engine was not even 100% fully warmed up at 17 minutes of driving, usually these engines operate between 203-210F when fully warmed up. Ambient temperatures due influence warm up times, but we are still not out of the Winter temps in many areas. Many owners tend to use the Remote Start features more when the temperatures are colder to warm the cabin and clear the windows, I get it, sometimes you need to to this, but doing this on a regular/daily or multiple times a day basis is not a wise idea.
It also not all about the engine idle time as well, it is about getting the oil, not the engine, up to a high enough temperature to start to "cook" fuel out of the oil. Again, fuel contamination of the oil can be cumulative depending on the outside ambient temperature and how the vehicle is driven. The more short drives, the worse the problem gets.
Pull your dipstic, check the oil level and smell te towel used to wipe the dipstick for fuel. A number of reports about vehicles fresh off the dealer lot have fuel smell in the oil.
