Once the archive is generated it isn't hard to download it I don't think... Click the link in the email and it starts downloading... They even have an option to split into multiple files for ease of download if you have slow or unreliable internet, and their download links do support "download managers" which can resume failed downloads.
Giving you 7 days to download it seems fine... Remember they are effectively giving you double storage capacity for those 7 days, and hundreds of gigabytes of network egress (which would cost $8 or so if I paid GCP network costs each time I takeout my account).
You defend Google better than any of their official spokespersons IMO :-)
I still dislike Google intensely for a number of things but not for this anymore.
(In case you are interested:
- serving me insulting ads and not giving me good ones whenever I didn't have adblock activated for over a decade. (edit: I've lost count of how many times I've clicked "not interested" on semi nude pictures advertising for scammy dating sites)
- causing me hours and hours and hours of frustration by breaking doublequotes
- killing Google+
- keeping me worried that they will shut me down until I can migrate my last account off Google and a few weeks
See if any of the top three or ten results contains the word "goolge" or if they have silently rewritten it in the background.
Adding doublequotes used to mean it should search for that exact phrase. Super simple example of one place were it was useful: when you were troubleshooting a weird crash and you saw a mis-spelling in an error message: you copy or type in that exact message in quotes, bam, if there was a match you got it.
Google is always doing lots of experiments on all of us, vut for the last decade this has been broken for me. It just ignores the doublequotes. Same with the verbatim setting, it has been just placebo.
Still: why make it so hard to get the archives once they are generated?