Somewhere about 2 years ago, Jack (@jpp72) set up a website (at his own expense) to keep track of all existing SF problems and their status of being fixed. It was open to all SF forum members, and Jack kept it very well maintained. At any given time you could find out what module had a problem, in detail, and where it was in getting it fixed. When he became Moderator, he offered to turn over the website to DVDFab (the company). Either Wilson or Erika told him, No, they were working on their own problem status website and they didn't need his. It still doesn't exist. It seems to me that that was when the status of what the developer was working on ended being told to Jack. Prior to that, they were more open with revealing information. It seemed to both Jack and me that we were being locked out of where things stood, which eventually lead to both of us resigning. Looking back on it, there was confusion from the start. They called us Influencers and set up a Zoom chatroom for us to have direct contact with Wilson and Erika. Erika moved on to be the new ad and troubleshooting (propaganda) minister and Judy (aka Rain) supposedly took over, but she never showed up in the Zoom chatroom, ever. Little did we understand, at the time, that we weren't Influencers to DVDFab, but were influencers to the forum members to have them fall in line with the way that DVDFab wanted things.
Stan, you are wasting your time. They aren't interested in what members think are the current problems. They aren't even interested in providing decent information about changes they have made in the changelog. It is far too often that members have to walk away from a new changelog muttering, "I wonder what that means and does it have anything to do with the problem I was having?" How many times do you see a change in the changelog that no one has reported on the forum? Either it was only reported in SF Feedback or via email support in one of the 57 varieties of StreamFab clones that DVDFab has released to the world. They are getting the information on what problems exist, one way or the other. If it makes financial sense, they'll work on it.