The background for this thread can be found here: https://community.logos.com/forums/t/119830.aspx
There are two versions of the Early Church Fathers sold by Faithlife, one for Protestants and one for Catholics:
https://www.logos.com/product/5771/early-church-fathers-protestant-edition
https://www.logos.com/product/7832/early-church-fathers-special-catholic-edition
Per the description on the product page for the Catholic Edition:
"The Early Church Fathers comes in two versions, Protestant and Catholic. Simply put, the difference is that the Protestant edition contains additional front matter written at a later date. There is no difference in the actual ECF text."
There are two problems I would like to suggest be fixed.
1. Faithlife prides itself on stating that users never pay for the same product twice, but in this case users who already own one version of the Early Church Fathers essentially do pay for the same product twice whenever they purchase a package that includes the other version. Someone who already owns the Catholic version will at least can some additional content, but someone who already owns the Protestant version will be paying for a stripped-down (value subtracted, rather than value added) version of what they already own. Since the set is public domain and no royalties are involved (as far as I know), why charge users twice? It seems like owners of the Protestant version should not have to pay anything for the Catholic version and owners of the Catholic version should pay at most an extremely small amount for the Protestant version.
2. Several users (see first link I provided) have commented on the fact that some books sold by Logos link to the Protestant version and some books link to the Catholic version. In other words, for all links to work, users have to purchase BOTH editions of this set. They each sell for $229.95, so that duplicate ownership isn't necessarily cheap. Mark Barnes has already outlined a solution to this problem (again, see first link). Faithlife fixed a similar problem in the past with Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics by Wallace. I would like to suggest that the fix described by Mark be implemented.
I am sure Faithlife has its reasons, but I personally do not see the value in even maintaining separate editions if the only difference is the removal of material that one group or the other might not agree with. I am not aware of any other products sold by Faithlife where this has happened, and it is an understatement to say that other products also have content that one group or another strongly objects to. If a Catholic publisher put out an edition of this set that included Catholic notes, and a Protestant publisher put out another edition of the set that included Protestant notes, then selling both sets would make sense. That is not the case here.