"Officials at Cnet's Download.com site have issued a statement apologizing
for bundling the popular open source Nmap security audit application with
adware that installed a toolbar and changed users' search engine to
Microsoft properties. Fyodor, the author of Nmap, raised the issue earlier
this week, saying that his app was being wrapped in malware on
Download.com. It's not unusual for download sites to bundle free
applications with some kind of adware or toolbar, but the creators of
open-source applications take a dim view of this practice, given the
nature and ethic of open source projects. Nmap is a venerable and widely
used tool for mapping networks and performing security audits and Fyodor
wrote in a message to an Nmap mailing list earlier this week that
Download.com, which is part of Cnet, a subsidiary of CBS Interactive, was
bundling the application with its installer, which, if a user agreed,
would install a search toolbar and change the user's search engine to
Bing."


,Ron