Jester David
Hero
I buy stuff all the time that I don't get to keep.I mean, it feels more honest?
Nobody expects to be able to keep receiving magazines in the mail when their magazine subscription ends.
You tell people they're buying something they expect certain rights and privileges real ownership entails.
Food. Drink. Clothes wear out. Books fall apart. Movie and music formats change.
Stuff is transitory and fleeting.
You pretty much can. You can save websites as PDFs. You just hit CTRL-P and print to PDF.And again, I really wouldn't care about DDB at all if they would just let us have PDFs. Then I can download them, back them up locally and in the cloud and take my chances that I might lose access.
Or you can save the HTML file and effectively have access to the website. Or get a webscraper program to basically download the entire thing and save it.
Or download the files to the app on your tablet and use them life PDFs on that device.
No. I'm arguing that worrying about "owning" digital files beyond the lifespan of the game is silly.Are you seriously arguing against people wanting to own electronic files because they won't stand up to some sort of armageddon scenario?
A thumb drive definetly seems safe. But so does having it as an optical disc:

D&D General - Hey, are we all cool with having to buy the same book twice, or what?
Oh sure but prowling forums shows me some people were still paying and using it for their 4e games and they lost their stuff. I get what you’re laying down but for some people it was a huge loss of years of material. True, though they did provide ample notice.

How many computers sold today still have those?
How many new MacBooks will your thumbdrive fit in?
Obsolescence comes, and it comes quickly.