I raise this matter as my electrical knowledge is at about the level as sub-atomic nuclear physics knowledge, and the question may be relevant to all of us. I anticipate there's expertise on the forum to provide good answers and information.
Many devices today are designed to be charged by plugging into a USB socket, and this is common to phones, tablets, cameras, GPS devices and so on. This is all the kind of stuff that we take with us while touring, and each manufacturer of such devices usually stresses that only their particular wall socket charging adapter should be used. That can therefore require taking a handful of wall socket USB chargers, one for each device you might travel with. Typically we may fit USB power outlets to our motorcycles, and I carry a third party wall socket USB charger with four outlets, with two rated to 2.1A and two rated to 2.4A, and all at 5 volts.
Is the manufacturers warning valid, or can any USB wall socket device or bike mounted power outlets be used to charge any of our essential devices?
Is there an industry standard, and will the device being charged only suck in what it needs?