This is a phenomenon that goes with arc-to-arc skiing generally - not specific to any ski. People are used to other folks on the hill traveling in a fundamentally down-the-fall-line direction regardless of which way their skis are pointed, because most folks on the hill don't know how to do anything else. Normally the only time they ever see someone skiing across the fall line it's on what's more or less an old-school traverse, which is easy to spot and more or less "expected" as one of the things that can happen ahead of you.
As soon as you start to combine high speed across the fall line with slow progress down the fall line, as with arc-to-arc skiing, you are HIGHLY susceptible to collisions. The further around you take each turn before transitioning the greater the risk. Specifically, people behind you end up moving down the hill much faster than you are, even though you might be traveling across the snow at least as fast if not faster. They see you moving really fast and their brains say, "Oh, I'm not going to catch up to someone moving that fast." In fact they catch up to the spot where you're going to be VERY fast, but they are not visualizing that kind of trajectory.
When I ski carved turns I am hyper-vigilant about my surroundings and will often just bail to the side of the run and wait until no one is around before continuing. I just know from experience that other skiers simply do not anticipate these kinds of movements. Whose "fault" any collision might be from a Skier's Code point of view is kind of irrelevant when you know that folks are unprepared to understand what's going on in their environment.