I would just like to say that the standard Noether's theorem very much applies to the case that $\delta L = \dot f$. For example, time translation is of this form. We can see this by performing the Noether procedure for a tiny time translation.
$$
q(t) \to q(t + \varepsilon) \approx q(t) + \varepsilon \dot q(t)\\
\dot q(t) \to \dot q(t) + \varepsilon \ddot q(t)
$$
This sends
$$
L \to L + \varepsilon \dot L
$$
as promised. If we then make $\varepsilon$ into a tiny time dependent function $\varepsilon(t)$, we now have
$$
q(t) \to q(t) + \varepsilon(t) \dot q(t) \\
\dot q(t) \to \dot q(t) + \varepsilon(t) \ddot q(t) + \dot \varepsilon(t) \dot q(t).
$$
After a bit of fussing around with the chain rule of multi variable calculus, we find that this sends
$$
L \to L + \varepsilon \dot L + \dot \varepsilon \dot q \frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot q}
$$
We then use the fact that $\delta S = 0$ on solutions to the equations of motion, and after an integration by parts find that
$$
\frac{d}{dt} ( p \dot q - L ) = 0
$$
on solutions to the equations of motion. This is just the conservation of energy
TLDR symmetries that change $L$ by a total derivative are just incorporated into Noether's theorem without having to do anything extra. Time translations are an example of this.
However, $\delta L \propto L$ is a little more exotic. Performing the Noether procedure on the Lagrangian of a free particle $(L = m \dot q^2 / 2)$ whose equation of motion $\ddot{q}= 0$ does have a scaling symmetry $q \to (1+\varepsilon) q$ but Lagrangian transforms as $\delta L = 2\epsilon L$, I find that the "conservation law" (if you want to call it that) is just $m q\ddot q = 0$, which is trivially $0$ anyway on the equations of motion.