Exactly. Or SW could be total tools and just say "you're over the age of our demographic, and unless you have kids, we don't need to acknowledge you." And also pull down everything ever posted on YT by fans with old tapes. Sure, I'm disappointed they took down all the full episodes posted at one point, but then again some of them were ones they released legally for sale and they need money. They didn't need to release any of it period. We've got a nice amount of classic episodes. Sure, it's not nearly as much stuff as we'd like, but the fact we got it at all is amazing. The fact they allow small clips of the show on Youtube is also amazing. We managed to get 7 Little Monsters and Crack Master out of the blue.When I had lunch with a couple of folks from SW, this is exactly the kind of thing I said to them about certain types of fans. If something rare or neat is posted, they don't thank anyone, they just ask for more rare stuff. It's completely ungrateful.
I have no doubt that, had they the manpower, the money, and the time, they'd release all that they could. It's not "selfishly sitting" on anything. It's being understaffed and underbudget to create such an unprecedented archive available for download/DVD/whatever. I couldn't even begin to imagine how many hands they'd need for that. Sure, I agree it would be great for them to release more episodes on a regular basis to Netflix, iTunes, and Amazon. But I doubt we'd see any semblance of all 4000+ episodes and every skit on demand.
But acting like this is a huge injustice is overreaction. You know how many entertainment companies would gladly shove everything that isn't at the moment or hyper popular under the rug? How many old cartoons get unfinished box sets, and a force of lawyers trolling Youtube for uploads of something they refuse to profit from? We lucked out.