The appeal of online converters (such as AnyDWG, Zamzar, or specialized Autodesk plugins) lies in speed. You upload the "locked" file, the server runs a complex algorithm to trace the vector data, and it spits out a DWG file.
It serves as a reminder that in the digital age, data wants to be free—even when we try to lock it inside a DWF, there is almost always a key hidden in the cloud, waiting to turn vectors back into lines. dwf to dwg online converter