In my opinion it's still a no brainer, disc brakes are still the way to go and the industry is obviously moving in that direction. In a few more years, most road bikes will have disc brakes. Today, most CX bikes and many commuter bikes have disc brakes, most brands have at least a couple disc road bike models. For me the advantages outweigh the disadvantages. Disc brakes are what I would have if I got a road bike. I've ridden both rim, mechanical disc, and hydraulic disc brake equipped road bikes. I much prefer hydraulic disc brakes on any bike I own.
1) A properly designed fork with a disc brake mount can be made plenty strong to resist the braking forces imparted to the rotor. With carbon fiber technology, a stronger fork designed for a disc brake only weighs a few ounces more. Non-rim brake wheels therefore can be lighter since they no longer need that braking surface.
2) On my carbon rim, I would rather wear a brake pad against an inexpensive rotor instead of a disc brake pad against my high dollar carbon wheels.
3) Overheating isn't a big issue, the rotor and caliper are out in the airstream, hydraulic brakes can use high temp fluid, pads have aluminum fins for sinking heat. Downhill bikes generate massive braking forces, no issues with overheating brakes there. Not to mention, with any braking application, the user needs to be smart with how they use their brakes, rim or disc, the user can cause any number of issues with improper application of brakes.
4) In the wet, disc brakes work infinitely better than rim brakes.
5) If I have a rim that is slightly out of true, no problem for disc brakes.
6) Disc brakes are well tested on mountain bikes, CX bikes, road bikes, motorcycles, ebikes, an countless other forms of transpiration. Other than the need to make a fork and hub a bit stronger, which has been done on all the new disc road and cyclocross bikes, it's a well known technology that is safe and reliable.
BTW, seahog32, not sure if English is your first language, but "break" is not the correct word for a mechanism that slows or stops a rotating wheel.