We need to talk about data as a physical object.
A lot of people think of data as something ethereal. It's not. It's still saved on disks somewhere, whether they're a traditional HDD or a modern SSD.
It's the same with "the cloud." The cloud isn't magic, it's just a massive number of disks owned by corporations, who are essentially renting you a portion of their disk space to back up data.
The thing is, when you physically destroy a drive, if there is no backup, you have physically destroyed the data contained on the disk.
In other words, data was always as physical as words on the page of a book. Video cassettes, cassette tapes, 8-tracks, CD-ROMs, DVD-ROMs, Bluray, and so on, are all physical items that act as data storage. That data can be retrieved with the proper "reader."
Why did we accept the change in how ownership worked simply because of a change of storage medium?
Data is physical and takes up space. Even if it can be copied infinitely, like text in a book, it still requires a physical storage medium, just like text in a book. You can't copy text onto nothing.
I feel like the conversation about how this all works got twisted somewhere along the way and the tech companies convinced everybody that data storage was magic and that it wasn't simply the same as every other data storage medium before it. Because why else would we accept that we could buy a digital file on a Bluray disk and own it forever, but when we buy the digital file over the internet, we can go fuck ourselves? It has never made sense to me, and I can only assume this happened because so few people understand that data is a physical object.