As I demonstrated in the other thread, anything you do to add volume that is going to equally affect both TDC and BDC by the same amount is going to occupy a disproportionally larger percentage of the volume at TDC than BDC, so by definition compression ratio is changed.
Sample fraction math: 14/1 + .25/.25 = 14.25 / 1.25 = 11.4/1. This would be like dishing a piston or using a thicker head gasket, different combustion chamber/head, anything that adds the same to both TDC and BDC: the change in volume is equal to both TDC and BDC volumes, compression decrease (the inverse is also true, if you subtract volume with domed pistons or thinner head gasket, compression increases). The smaller denominator is affected more.
Stroking and boring is different and increases compression because they add ZERO volume at TDC and add volume only at BDC (or anything other than TDC). The position of the piston at the top of the cylinder doesn't change at TDC when you stroke, it just moves down more, and at TDC the increased bore gives zero volume because the height of the swept cylinder is zero at TDC. Thus only the numerator changes at anything other than TDC, and you always end up with increased compression ratio.
In reality it's very little. Boring or stroking an engine a moderate amount doesn't add more than .5-1.0 compression. 9.5 to 10.5 isn't going to hurt anything, it will just give you more power associated with the stroking modification. Even if you do get a slight knock on an older car, you just retard the distributor by 1-2 degrees; the increased displacement and compression ratio is still going to give more power than the loss of 1-2 degrees timing.