ancestry might not have gotten preferential treatment specifically but generally corporations did because charging that amount is a gate to keep out people who can't afford it
Which, to be clear, isn't a bad thing. You can't have randos coming in and ruining your documents. There must be an element of "are you seriously sure you can treat these things with care?" and 150k isn't a lot for a serious document digitizing entity.
The law is very clear: either the state hires an approved vendor, but only charges the actual costs of duplication plus hard drive or other media (no mark-up allowed), or the state allows the requestor to digitize the files themselves onsite for free. This is long-established law in most states, and more than forty years old in New York.
The state’s quote of $152,000 was more than fifty times the actual costs of digitization. We provided them with a breakdown of the costs, using both commercial and government sources as comparisons, even though that is supposed to be the state’s job, not the requestor’s.
The state still denied our request and our appeal.
So, no. Inflating estimates of the costs of public records by fifty times is flat-out illegal.