I guess it depends on whether or not the accuracy you are getting is the best the rifle can give.
Not only that, some rifles don't really care how far the bullet is seated off the lands. This has a lot to do with the tolerances in the chamber. I have a Tikka T3 in 6.5x55 with a factory chamber and it could care less how far the bullet needs to jump to get to the lands. It shoots everything from 85 grain to 160 grain bullets better than I can hold, even from a rest. If the groups are larger than the normal half inch, it's my fault.
That rifle is an anomaly in my safe. I have a 7x57 that behaves similarly but isn't so forgiving with heavier bullets. The twist rate is to slow. The others in the safe like to be close to the lands, some only shoot really well with the bullet touching the lands.
One caliber is a holdover from many decades back when long heavy for caliber bullets were the norm. The necks were also usually very long and the reasoning behind that was that the neck would hold the bullet straight until it entered the lands far enough so that the bullets wouldn't cant.
I don't have any issues with seating bullets further out, with less than one caliber being held. Some cartridges such as the 300 Savag, 7 Ultra Mag and 7.62x39 have necks that are shorter than one caliber.
Just make sure there is enough neck tension to hold the bullet straight while feeding it into the chamber and if your chamber tolerances are tight enough, all should be well with less than one caliber seating.