I lack time to comment further here, but you’re already making some bad conclusions, and that’s not your role right now. Question everything.
For example, it’s not really about temperature. The main enemy of optical media is air, especially moisture in the air. I can leave a CD-R in a car (properly stored) that is 160 F inside in the summer, 2 F in the winter, and then disc is still fine 10 years later. Or I can put it in the (non-food) freezer, thaw it back out, and it’s fine. The main issue with freezers is frozen moisture from food.
This is a great example of how easy it is to be wrong.
About forums, mentioned above, realize that some of us also had “day jobs” in media (not just our passion hobby), or contracts, some of which may include NDAs. So we don’t speak in some official capacity, because we can’t. However, we can give out info in these unofficial locations, in an unofficial capacity, often behind avatars / usernames. You just have to know how to find us, and know how to ignore mouthy pretenders (like The Digital Dolphin / Dolphinius_Rex was in the 2000s, the short-lived Naked Geek, and some others). But again, most of what you’ll see is old content, backward looking, because optical media is really replaced now, by a mix of SSD and cloud. Much of the crowd is gone now, to the point where I’ve now lost many of my contacts.
Not to give you ideas, but I think a better thesis would be to imagine new media, that looks at strengths and weaknesses of extant media. A wish list of sorts. And I doubt you’ll be the first to do it, so locate others doing the same. For example, optical media that spins sucks. Spinning sucks, period. Perhaps a sort of “optical SSD” for archival? Since you like Jobs, think different. ;)
Well, that reply was longer than I intended.
Whatever you choose for a thesis, I wish you luck. What you did not want is a weak or spurious topic, nor a starting argument. That was my main fear here.