Modern printing uses dithering. When you’re going from a high bit rate down to 10 bits or 8 bits, it’s completely fine to use random dithering. Random might not be as fun to write about as Bayer dither patterns, or error diffusion, but for higher dynamic ranges, random is as effective.
Black and white digital dithering of course has it’s roots in halftoning, which printing has used for more than a century, and it continues to be used for newspapers, for example.
Photoshop dithers by default when converting from 16 bits per channel to 8 bits. Lots of other image software doesn’t do this, but you start paying attention quickly, I learned from experience, when you order a poster-sized print for $100 and it comes out with visible banding you couldn’t see on your monitor.