Not all uses cases for a car are the same. Some are held entirely on private property and are used as work vehicles where the seat belt chime would be unnecessary and distracting. Which is why most manufacturers provide a sneaky mechanism to disable it. I own the vehicle, why wouldn't they let me disable the nag?
Their solution? Make it intentionally complicated, but still possible:
Step 1: Turn your headlight switch off
Step 2: Unbuckle your seatbelt and turn the key to the off position
Step 3: Turn your key to the on position till the seatbelt warning light turns off
Step 4: Buckle and unbuckle the seatbelt three times and end on the unbuckled position
Step 5: Turn your headlight switch on for three seconds and then turn it off
Step 6: Repeat step number 3
Step 7: Wait for the seat belt warning light to turn on and off again then buckle and buckle the seat belt
I remember doing this sort of song and dance with my RAM and Jeep. Sometimes I am just moving around a parking lot for a brief moment, or especially when off roading (read: stuck) and don't want the constant beeping.
Seat belts are 100% an immediate habit for me. Driving at any rate of speed without one makes me feel super sketchy and uncomfortable, so the nag is not needed at all.
On my Ford's I would use FORScan to defeat it via the OBD2 port.
I do have a security gateway bypass module for my truck though so hopefully I will be able to start playing around with AlfaOBD soon.
Their solution? Make it intentionally complicated, but still possible:
Step 1: Turn your headlight switch off
Step 2: Unbuckle your seatbelt and turn the key to the off position
Step 3: Turn your key to the on position till the seatbelt warning light turns off
Step 4: Buckle and unbuckle the seatbelt three times and end on the unbuckled position
Step 5: Turn your headlight switch on for three seconds and then turn it off
Step 6: Repeat step number 3
Step 7: Wait for the seat belt warning light to turn on and off again then buckle and buckle the seat belt