However, as we've seen so far, teams are not choosing flaps that pivot at the trailing edge of the flap with a leading edge that pivots up. Instead we see front-hinged flaps with trailing edges that lay back. Apparently they are relying upon an interpretation of "fail safe" as a mechanical one, not an aerodynamic one. Presumably a spring force or worm gear locking maintains Corner Mode, while a hydraulic or electromechanical force overcomes this to move the flap into Straight Mode. Thus, if the hydraulics or electronics ever fail, the passive spring force, whether mechanical or pneumatic, forces the flap to stay in Corner Mode.
Which leads me to: was rear wing DRS ever strictly an aero-based fail safe design? Sometimes this appeared to be the case with the high pressure side of the flap presenting enough angle to be necessarily forced back down when the actuator counter force was relieved. Other times, the flap pivoted so far upward, that it would seemingly require actuator counter force in the opposite direction to get the flap back down to high downforce mode i.e. hydraulic or spring force re-seated the flap, not aerodynamic force. I think we even saw rear wing DRS flaps being torn off at times, which would imply there was aero pressure forcing the flap open, not closed.
Distinct from rear wing DRS is that these lay-back FWAS flaps find their stop in the opposite orientation--on their topsides, which they are pushed against, and the passive spring force (or worm gear locking) alone bears aerodynamic downforce, whereas RW DRS flaps fell on to their stops, with the inherently passive stop bearing aerodynamic downforce, with perhaps some actuator imbued force pushing down upon it as will to prevent flutter.
A mechanical fail safe does not seem like a perfect fail safe. I say an aero fail safe would be safer, but if they've gotten on with a mechanical fail safe for 10+ years I suppose it's not an issue.
As for general arrangements, there are four options as I understand it.
4-element: two split flaps
2-element split: one split flap
2-element continuous: two continuous flaps
1-element: one continuous flap
