I'm really sorry to see you've chosen to include the OpenCandy adware as a mandatory part of the ImgBurn setup routine. From what you've said in a couple of other posts, it seems you're missing the point of my (and, likely, many others') aversion to this adware. Software that sells me, my (or my users') name, eyeballs, attention, etc., may be "no charge", but it is not "free". In those cases, *I* am (or my users are) the product, and many of us either don't appreciate it or have hard-and-fast corporate policies against such things. We're not "overly sensitive", either; we're concerned about the networks and users in the businesses we help manage. My main objection to OpenCandy is this: It is a piece of closed-source software that must run with elevated privileges on equipment within my intranet. It makes connections to outside servers and exchanges data with them. What is it sending them? Where are the servers? Who runs them? Are they secure? Is the client secure from being hijacked by bad guys? I can't just take their word for it--I have to be able to prove it. Nothing in this process is transparent, and I cannot, in keeping with good governance, allow that to happen. If I do, I am not discharging my fiduciary responsibility to my employer. Your assertion that OpenCandy is no worse than the Yahoo toolbar is incorrect: The Yahoo package was a single, known piece of software and, bad as it may have been, you at least knew it was going out under your name. OpenCandy, on the other hand, offers to my users whatever someone has paid OpenCandy to toss at them. You should be concerned that the "Super Safe Nifty Toolbar" is presented to your users as "recommended by ImgBurn". Is this really the way you want your name used? It is one thing if you use OpenCandy and are up-front and honest about it; in that case, I still can't allow your software into my intranet, but I won't think you're deceitful. If, on the other hand, you do not tell your users, clearly and up front, about OpenCandy (or bury it in the middle of a change log), your reputation will suffer. I--and many other administrators--will actively block your site(s) and blacklist your software. Your good reputation will be trashed, and a reputation is one thing that, once sullied, cannot be easily recovered. Several of us will be submitting this site to Bluecoat (at the least) for inclusion within their "adware" category, which is prohibited in many organizations. Once this happens, your site traffic will decline a bit. Perhaps you don't care, but *I* do, mainly because I now have to begin the process of having users de-install ImgBurn while I find something to replace it. Hell, charge for ImgBurn! You deserve to be compensated for your work! OpenCandy, though, is a terrible way to go about it.