Navagon: Given the number of titles that have been pulled from GOG already, they're very cautious about things like that now.
teshra: I'm just redisovering GOG again after about a year...is there a thread or list somewhere that says what games have been pulled? The forums here are just a free for all for any manner of topics and search didn't have any valid hits for the terms I uses.
I think there is a user managed list somewhere, but yeah the forum is a bit of a free-for-all mess at finding things sadly. From what I recall though not a huge number of games are missing:
1) A few sports (mostly car/racing kinds) titles have been removed from all distributors (not just GoG) because of the licence for the assets (eg cars) being expired.
2) The developer of Perimeter and a few other games had their contracts come under a change of owner and thus, again, their titles were pulled (though there is hope that they'll be brought back through re-negociation with new rights holders).
Most of the time these deals only remove games from sale, not distribution - as such GoG still provides the games for people who bought them, they just can't retain the ability to sell any more units of them.
Thunderstone: Now whether or not this will be good for the franchise and the business is another story altogether. At least its not being sold to a company like EA, Disney does try to preserve the integrity of their franchises (or pretends to at least).
They can be just as troublesome as any company - the Ghibli franchise is currently distributed by Disney through a second deal after their first fell through years ago. This was as a result of Disney making significant changes through editing and translation to the stories from their original content (making them "suitable for western audiences" apparently).
They only got the second contract because of an agreement not to do so.
So they can change things around, but I do agree with the general sentiment that disney, for all their ups and downs, is generally a decent big company as big companies go (even if their polices regarding copyright are somewhat heavyhanded).