I believe comment 12 is the key here. The dialogue has a very poor
explanation but is trying to do the right thing. After confirming my
configuration was similar to comment 12, I proceeded with "yes" and it
all worked fine. I also noticed that my .config/user-dirs.locale
contained "en-US" (my old setting) before accepting the changes and "en-
GB" (the new setting) after accepting.

It is simply noticing either old default, manual changes, or defaults
for languages that didn't used to have translations are pointing to the
wrong place, and now we have a more sensible default - either triggered
by user changing the locale or a translations update.

In my case it looked like it was trying to rename my Desktop to
"Downloads". What is really happening is that my downloads location was
in fact Desktop (I think this was the old default?), and it simply
wanted to give it the proper name. I would guess that if you didn't
trigger this by changing language, then your translations have been
updated. For example, your English-India pack used to be missing the
Music translation so defaulted to /home/user. When the missing
translation is filled in, it tries to confirm that the setting is
/home/user/Music, fails, and asks you what to do.

I think the behavior is desirable in most cases, but the explanation
needs massive improvement. The only case I can imagine this being
undesirable behavior would be if the user had manually (and
deliberately) changed hiis directories from the defaults.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/209513

Title:
  After upgrade, "Update standard folders to current language" threatens to 
rename your home folder

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