How about this: As you ride down the road various bumps and flexing, including normal fork action, introduce some "instantaneous and short term' flexing of the caliper in relation to the rotor. This is normal and all is well.
This Y axis or sideways force to the rotor causes the brake caliper pistons to retract or get bumped back slightly vastly lessening the drag of the pads on the rotor, again all is normal.
So what I am saying is a little rotor warp + suspension movement is a good thing as it retracts the pistons a very small amount ( in addition to the hysteresis of the piston seals themselves).
So ..... every time you attempt to measure the brake drag, you do this just after applying the brakes as you pull into your garage...right? Of course they will show some brake drag because the conditions of normal riding down the road and the resultant effects have not occurred yet, so the brakes seem tight.
You end up chasing your tail!
The point is this
Whatever brake drag you feel with the bike sitting in your garage will not be present once you start riding as the forks, caliper, wheel, triple clamps bearings frame etc... begin to flex slightly.
Measuring brake drag after coming to a stop will always give you a false reading.
Just ask racers who have had a heroic save from crashing only to find that the save was so violent that it pushed the pistons waaayyyy back into the calipers and now they have no brakes!
Fretka