There's some views given about potentially banning this, which I'm ambivalent about. It's hardly groundbreaking in its concept, not of a design "earthquake" type cleverness, and with others potentially bringing their own version will simply equalise any realised drag reduction. That to, ultimately, make it unnecessary in research spend, especially under cost cap regime.
Notable that Ferrari also suffered unintended rear downforce release during live public testing (albeit for different reason) with LH lobbing it in China, forcing further R&D expenditure in bringing more reliable application.
Raw fact though, it still hasn't brought parity (in whole race performance) with conventional stance on Mercedes chassis. That suggests cap spend would be better applied somewhere else.
Similar in failure to early BBW rear brake blend systems in failure mode, that to swap ends at most potent and inopportune moments, Sauber being a particularly high performing team in that aspect

the risk of injury just the same though. That system of blending rear brake convention with regeneration potential a more worthwhile "advance" in technical achievement though, and supports effort put into development. This "flip" wing does nothing though, in that direction for either F1 or technology in general. Especially if the whole field adopt and that transient period advantage dissappear.
The FIA seemed to make statement in promoting "adventurous" design here, which gave birth to it. But it's hardly an significant advance, more just trying to make up for the Dog's breakfast of PU regulation that's been forced onto current F1 competitors for no gain.
Note that the front wings, all of them, apparently have need to "pull" the flap up into normal mode against aero load (are any of them anything to the opposite?)
If the FIA wanted development in competent application here, they should have allowed for it in space to place mechanisms in reasonable position to facilitate safe development, rather than leave teams to "hide" this in tge previous aero regulation derived equipment allowance.
This whole thing looks pathetic in its outlook for such a highly scrutinesd race series.
Note to mod, please move if inappropriate in this car thread. I've responded to general discussion, but may not fully fit remit of just SF26 hardware strictly.