I'm guessing the OP is getting at better defining the equivalence principal. As has come up on many threads here, there are different researches have used many different definitions, of varying precision.
My take on what they are worried about is:
1) hold clock above the the ground, it will run slow compared to a clock far from any gravitating body.
2) What about a clock in rocket not touching any walls?
Some partial answers, for different ways of making this more precise:
a) If a person in a rocket holds the clock above the floor, you get the same slowing as a person holding a clock on earth.
b) If you imagine a free falling clock near the Earth's surface, vs. a free falling clock in the rocket, things get a little complicated. The Earth's gravity is radial and different at different heights. The rocket's pseudogravity is strictly uniform. The best one could say, is that to the extent that span of free fall, the distance of free fall, and size of the clock are small enough that radial (tidal) and altitude effects are below what you can measure, then the free falling clock near the Earth behaves identically to the free falling clock in the rocket.