Look at it this way: You're getting paid a lot for a show.. some joyboy in the audience has brought a front surface mirror and hauled himself a few feet up some nearby gantry or pillar and thrust the mirror in a beam to see if he can send it to source. Stuff like that occurs to people, it's just sod's law. If the laser dies, so does the chance at good pay. People SHOULD be interested in this if they're making lasers to sell. Maybe it doesn't happen like that so much, but most likely only because dwell time is short, or people make it properly difficult for others to do this to a laser at a show, but the risk is real, Florian Rotter's PBS cube problems suggest that far lower degrees of reflection can do it.
I don't start out by forcing full reflection. But to test, it MUST be done. The only way to know if you have gone far enough in any new situation is to go too far. When I want to trust a diode, I have to know exactly how far I can trust it.
EDIT:
First time I discovered this, it was a metal tipped screwdriver used to adjust a collimating optic. The seller insisted I'd touched it with ESD, sending high currents though anodising on parts of the mount. I ended up shoving sparks into the collimator just to prove that my diodes can't be killed that way in my designs.Like I said, tests like these matter, or we cannot make endurance claims for lasers we sell. IF you can demonstate such ruggedness, you save money later, when people try to claim money spent on your laser after they killed it themselves. It really pays to be able to prove their claim false.