Yeah and you got repaid with thousands of hours of free entertainment when it was televised and now you can pay $12 to have full access to the entirety of the franchise via streaming services. You purchased a book for $15 and your reward is an entertaining story you can read again and again. Heck Paramount and CBS even let people make fan films of their intellectual property, before a segment of the fan base took advantage of their good will. So I would say that CBS and by extension pocket books have done more than enough to settle the apparent debt owed to fans.
Wanting a satisfying conclusion and demanding one because 'they owe you' are two very different things.
Well, I kind of agree with both of you. CBS & Paramount have earned a lot of money off of Star Trek over the years. It's not like they provide us with Star Trek out of the goodness of their heart. They do it to make money. Nothing wrong with that. But it's not free, not by a long shot. I bought VHS videos years ago, then DVDs to replace the VHS, and in some cases Blu-Rays to replace the DVDs. I've purchased every book I could get my hands on too. None of that was free. CBS and Paramount have made a lot of money from me.
And it generally benefits them to keep the fans wanting more. Because we keep buying and making them money.
Now I do agree there is a big difference between wanting and demanding. I'd love nothing more than to have my cake and eat it too. I'd love for them to find a way to continue the existing relaunches, perhaps tie in to Picard wherever possible, but continue as an alternate/parallel universe. Hell, I've enjoyed the litverse so much over the years I would have loved for them to just pick up where the novels left off (well, 12 years after), my own little Star Trek utopia (though I know that's totally unrealistic, but I can dream

And I'd still like at least one more Deep Space Nine novel
