I think it's meaningless. Every password KDF is randomized. But randomization isn't what makes them difficult to brute-force; non-password-KDF "salted" hashes are extremely easy to brute force, which is the whole reason we have password KDFs.
"Salted hashes" are one of the more treacherous security cargo cults, because they create the impression that the big problem you have to solve hashing a password is somehow mixing in a salt. No: just doing that by itself doesn't accomplish anything meaningful at all.
Understood, but I think this is just people using "hash" and "KDF" interchangeably. Agree that a KDF is the way to go, but salting it is also a good idea to explode the search space.
"Salted hashes" are one of the more treacherous security cargo cults, because they create the impression that the big problem you have to solve hashing a password is somehow mixing in a salt. No: just doing that by itself doesn't accomplish anything meaningful at all.