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ImgBurn
View on Wikipedia| ImgBurn | |
|---|---|
ImgBurn screenshot | |
| Developer | LIGHTNING UK! |
| Initial release | 4 October 2005[1] |
| Stable release | 2.5.8.0
/ 16 June 2013[1] |
| Written in | C++ |
| Operating system | Microsoft Windows Wine officially supported[2] |
| Available in | Multilingual |
| Type | CD/DVD authoring |
| License | Freeware |
| Website | www |
ImgBurn is an optical disc authoring program that allows the recording of many types of CD, DVD and Blu-ray images to recordable media (.cue files are supported as of version 2.4.0.0).[3] Starting with version 2.0.0.0, ImgBurn can also burn files and data directly to CD or DVD. It is written in C++. It supports padding DVD-Video files so the layer break occurs on a proper cell boundary (where possible).
Prior to version 2.5.1.0, the program was freeware. From version 2.5.1.0 to 2.5.7.0, Ask.com adware was included in the installer.[4] This was replaced in version 2.5.8.0 with OpenCandy adware.[5] Only the version of the installer distributed directly from imgburn.com contains OpenCandy; the version distributed via the official mirror sites is adware-free. No notice is present on www.imgburn.com that the checksums/hashes provided now only match the OpenCandy version of the installer; however, the author of the program has provided the expected hash values for the adware-free version on the support forum.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
History
[edit]ImgBurn is an optical disc authoring software created by LIGHTNING UK, the author of DVD Decrypter, after he was forced to stop development of DVD Decrypter in response to a cease and desist order from Macrovision.[14]
Features
[edit]- Supported formats: BIN, CUE, DI (Atari Disk Image), DVD, GI, IMG, ISO, MDS, NRG, PDI and more.
- Ability to build DVD Video discs (from a VIDEO_TS folder), HD DVD Video discs (from a HVDVD_TS folder) and Blu-ray Video discs (from a BDAV / BDMV folder).
- Full unicode folder/file name support.
- Supported environments: Windows 95, 98, Me, NT4, 2000, XP, 2003, Vista, 2008, 7, 2008 R2, 8, 8.1, and 10 (including all the 64-bit versions). It also officially supports Wine.
- Image queue provides support for burning several images with minimum interaction.
- ImgBurn is relatively lightweight (compared to similar programs); under 1.8MB for all installed features.
- ImgBurn is based on the optical disc burning engine of DVD Decrypter; however, it does not have the ability to circumvent copy protections of encrypted DVDs. As of version 2.3.0.0, ImgBurn can create image files from unencrypted CDs/DVDs; however, it cannot remove Content Scramble System (CSS) encryption or any other copy protection. It is possible to use third-party software such as DVD43, an intermediate driver that operates between the hardware and software, for such purpose.
Limits
[edit]- Does not support RAW disc ripping or burning[15]
- Does not support multi-session discs[16][clarification needed]
- Cannot write CD subchannel data[15]
- Cannot copy discs directly, without first creating an image file[17]
- Each session of the software can only burn to one drive at a time.[citation needed]
Hardware interface support
[edit]ImgBurn supports many low-level drive access interfaces. This allows it to operate on almost all Windows platforms. ImgBurn can use any of the following interfaces:
- Advanced SCSI Programming Interface (ASPI) – WNASPI32.DLL (Adaptec)
- ASAPI – ASAPI.DLL (VOB Computersysteme/Pinnacle Systems)
- SCSI Pass Through Interface (SPTI) – Microsoft
- ElbyCDIO – Elaborate Bytes
- Patin-Couffin – VSO Software
Inclusion of Adware
[edit]Version 2.5.8.0 of ImgBurn (current as of 2022[update]) includes OpenCandy, a potentially unwanted program/adware.[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "ImgBurn Change log".
- ^ "AppsThatSupportWine - the Official Wine Wiki". Archived from the original on June 3, 2011. Retrieved April 21, 2011.
- ^ "The Official ImgBurn Website". Retrieved 1 January 2017.
- ^ "DVD Burning Software ImgBurn Updated. Turns Adware - gHacks Tech News". 17 March 2010. Retrieved 1 January 2017.
- ^ a b LIGHTNING UK! (2013-06-16). "The Official ImgBurn Website: Change log". www.imgburn.com. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
Changed: No longer bundling/offering the Ask.com toolbar in the setup program, OpenCandy now handles product offerings during installation.
- ^ LIGHTNING UK! (2013-06-16). "The Official ImgBurn Website: Download". www.imgburn.com. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
- ^ "MD5 doesn't match any downloadable installers - ImgBurn General". forum.imgburn.com. 2016-10-29. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
- ^ "Wrong hash? - ImgBurn Support". forum.imgburn.com. 2016-06-23. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
- ^ "Wrong Hash 2 - ImgBurn Support". forum.imgburn.com. 2017-01-31. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
- ^ "ImgBurn". fileforum.betanews.com. 2013-06-17. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
CLEAN INSTALL! No OpenCandy bundled.
- ^ "ImgBurn Download: Changelog". Softpedia. 2017-03-31. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
no more 'opencandy' adware!
- ^ "Codecs.com | Downloads for ImgBurn 2.5.8". www.free-codecs.com. 2016-06-20. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
Download ImgBurn 2.5.8 - without OpenCandy!
- ^ "ImgBurn". www.majorgeeks.com. 2016-06-23. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
This is a clean, no OpenCandy version.
- ^ Mennecke, Thomas (2005-11-24). "Macrovision Forces Removal of DVD Decrypter". Slyck. Archived from the original on 2012-02-07. Retrieved 2007-05-18.
- ^ a b "ImgBurn v2.2.0.0 Released!". 2007-02-19. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
- ^ "Multisession Disk Where is the option??". 2007-02-22. Retrieved 2010-04-24.
- ^ "How to copy a disc using Imgburn". 2008-03-20. Retrieved 2011-02-12.
External links
[edit]ImgBurn
View on GrokipediaImgBurn is a freeware optical disc authoring program for Microsoft Windows, developed by the independent programmer Lightning UK!, enabling the creation, burning, and verification of images for CD, DVD, HD DVD, and Blu-ray media.[1]
The software provides five primary modes—Read for extracting disc contents to image files, Build for compiling files or folders into disc images, Write for burning images to physical media, Verify for checking burn integrity against source files, and Discovery for testing drive-media compatibility and speeds—while supporting a wide array of image formats including BIN, CUE, ISO, and NRG, as well as audio CD creation from compressed formats like MP3 and FLAC.[1][2]
Initially released on October 4, 2005, ImgBurn achieved version 2.5.8.0 as its final update on June 16, 2013, after which development ceased, yet it persists as a reliable tool for legacy optical media tasks due to its comprehensive features and absence of ongoing maintenance requirements.[3][4]
Users have encountered risks from third-party download mirrors bundling adware or malware, underscoring the importance of obtaining the program solely from the official website to ensure a clean installation.[5][6]
Overview
Description and Purpose
ImgBurn is a lightweight freeware application designed for authoring and burning optical discs, supporting formats such as CD, DVD, HD DVD, and Blu-ray.[1] Developed for Microsoft Windows operating systems from version 95 onward, including 64-bit editions up to Windows 10, it provides tools for handling disc images in multiple formats including BIN, CCD, CDI, CUE, DI, DVD, GI, IMG, ISO, MDS, NRG, and PDI.[1] The primary purpose of ImgBurn is to enable reliable creation, writing, and verification of optical media, catering to both novice users seeking simple burning tasks and advanced users requiring detailed configuration options.[1] It facilitates burning data files to discs, producing audio CDs from formats like AAC, APE, FLAC, MP3, and WAV, and constructing video discs compliant with DVD Video, HD DVD Video, or Blu-ray Video standards.[1] Additionally, the software supports reading discs to image files and building images directly from files or folders without intermediate disc writing.[1] ImgBurn operates through five distinct modes—Read, Build, Write, Verify, and Discovery—to address specific disc-related workflows: extracting data from discs to images, compiling files into images or direct burns, writing images to blank media, confirming burn accuracy by comparing against source images, and testing drive compatibility with various media speeds.[1] This modular approach ensures comprehensive quality assurance, such as verifying disc readability to detect errors post-burn.[1]Licensing and Development Model
ImgBurn is distributed under a freeware licensing model, granting users a non-exclusive license for personal use without any associated fees.[1] This permits downloading and employing the software for individual purposes, such as disc burning and image creation, but explicitly prohibits commercial sale, bundling with other applications, or any form of redistribution for profit.[7] The software's intellectual property rights are fully reserved by its creator, with hosting or sharing of the ImgBurn executable, including its name or logo, requiring prior written consent; limited redistribution is allowed only for non-commercial, promotional, instructional, or reference contexts.[7] Unlike open-source alternatives, ImgBurn's source code is not publicly available, restricting modifications or derivative works to authorized parties.[1] The development model centers on a solo effort by an independent creator known as LIGHTNING UK!, who operates without affiliation to a formal company or institutional backing.[1] Released initially in 2005 and maintained sporadically thereafter, the project relies on voluntary user donations via platforms like PayPal to sustain updates, rather than subscription fees or advertising revenue.[1] The final stable release, version 2.5.8.0, occurred on June 16, 2013, after which development has effectively ceased, positioning ImgBurn as a legacy tool in a donation-driven, individual-led framework that prioritizes accessibility over ongoing enterprise support.[2]History
Origins and Early Development
ImgBurn was developed by an independent programmer using the pseudonym LIGHTNING UK!, a British software author previously known for creating DVD Decrypter, a popular tool for reading and burning optical discs that included capabilities for bypassing copy protection on commercial DVDs.[8] In mid-2005, following legal pressures from entities enforcing digital rights management—likely including Macrovision, which had introduced new anti-copying technologies like RipGuard—LIGHTNING UK! discontinued all support and development for DVD Decrypter to avoid potential litigation over its decryption features.[9][10] To preserve the advanced burning engine from DVD Decrypter while complying with legal constraints, LIGHTNING UK! initiated ImgBurn as a dedicated optical disc authoring application focused exclusively on writing, building, and verifying disc images without any reading or decryption functions. The software was positioned as a freeware successor, emphasizing reliability for tasks like creating data, audio, and video discs on CD, DVD, HD DVD, and later Blu-ray media. Early development prioritized a lightweight interface and precise control over burn settings, such as write speeds, buffer levels, and layer break positions for dual-layer DVDs, drawing directly from the proven engine of its predecessor.[11] ImgBurn's initial public release occurred on October 4, 2005, as version 1.0.0.0, which supported basic image burning from formats like ISO, BIN/CUE, and Nero NRG files, along with verification against checksums to ensure data integrity post-burn.[3] Subsequent early updates, such as version 1.1.0.0 on December 2, 2005, introduced improvements like enhanced UDF file system handling and better compatibility with Windows XP, reflecting iterative refinements based on user feedback from forums and beta testing.[3] Development remained a solo effort by LIGHTNING UK!, hosted on a dedicated website (imgburn.com) without commercial backing, allowing rapid iterations unhindered by corporate oversight but reliant on community-driven bug reports.[1]Major Version Releases
Version 1.0.0.0, the initial public release of ImgBurn, was made available on October 4, 2005, focusing on core optical disc writing operations for CD and DVD media.[3] A pivotal advancement came with version 2.0.0.0 on August 5, 2006, which introduced the Build mode enabling users to compile files into ISO images or burn directly to disc without pre-existing images, alongside queue management for batch operations, command-line interface (CLI) switches such as /LOG and /INFO for logging and device queries, and support for IBB project files to save burn configurations.[12][3] Version 2.5.0.0 followed on July 26, 2009, expanding functionality with an Advanced input mode in Build for complex project setups, native handling of CloneCD (CCD/MDS) image files including sub-channel data, support for additional audio formats like E/FLAC/WV with embedded CUE sheets, Unicode filename preservation in MDS files, and refined layer break preview options integrated with external tools.[1][13] Subsequent releases refined these features incrementally, culminating in version 2.5.8.0 on June 16, 2013, which added UEFI bootable disc creation, Opus and TAK audio decoding, expandable I/O buffers up to 1 GB for improved performance, USB 3.0+ connection speed logging for external drives, and the BurnerMax Payload option for overburning DVD+R double-layer media beyond standard capacities.[14][2]| Version | Release Date | Key Additions |
|---|---|---|
| 1.0.0.0 | October 4, 2005 | Basic CD/DVD burning and image writing.[3] |
| 2.0.0.0 | August 5, 2006 | Build mode, CLI support, IBB files.[12][3] |
| 2.5.0.0 | July 26, 2009 | Advanced Build, CCD support, Unicode in MDS.[1][13] |
| 2.5.8.0 | June 16, 2013 | UEFI support, larger buffers, overburning.[14][2] |
Post-2013 Status and Maintenance
Following the release of version 2.5.8.0 on June 16, 2013, ImgBurn has received no further updates to its core application or feature set.[2][14] The update addressed minor issues such as cosmetic display fixes, support for additional image formats like BIN/CUE, and improvements to the write queue handling, but no subsequent versions have been issued by developer Lightning UK.[14][15] The official website, imgburn.com, continues to provide downloads of the 2013 version, with modifications to the installer over time to eliminate bundled adware, including the removal of OpenCandy—a potentially unwanted program included in earlier distributions.[1][16] These installer changes represent the primary form of post-release maintenance, aimed at improving user experience without altering the software's functionality.[16] Active development has ceased, with Lightning UK not announcing or releasing new builds since 2013, leading segments of the user community to classify ImgBurn as abandonware.[17][2] The official forum remains operational for user support, where discussions focus on compatibility workarounds for modern hardware, such as Blu-ray drives and Windows 10/11 systems, rather than official fixes.[18][19] Despite the lack of updates, the software retains viability for legacy optical disc tasks, though it may fail to detect newer drive firmware or encounter reporting errors on post-2015 operating systems.[18][20]Core Functionality
Disc Burning and Writing Modes
ImgBurn supports multiple disc writing modes to handle various optical media types, including CD, DVD, HD DVD, and Blu-ray, with automatic selection based on detected media for optimal compatibility and quality.[21] These modes dictate the recording strategy, such as whether data is written continuously or in segments, influencing factors like error rates, playback seamlessness, and multi-session support.[22] The software's primary write types include Disc-at-Once (DAO), Session-at-Once (SAO), Track-at-Once (TAO), and Incremental, configurable via the Write Settings tab where 'Auto' defaults to media-appropriate options.[21] DAO and SAO enable uninterrupted, continuous writing of an entire disc or session, which ImgBurn prioritizes as the default for CDs (SAO) and DVDs/HD DVDs/Blu-rays (DAO) to minimize gaps and ensure high-fidelity burns suitable for video or single-session data.[21][22] TAO writes individual tracks separately, with the laser disengaging between them, making it useful for multi-track audio CDs requiring explicit gaps, though ImgBurn implements it selectively and favors DAO/SAO for superior results on compatible drives.[21] Incremental recording, the default for DVD/HD DVD/Blu-ray formats, divides data into packets allowing pauses or additions, supporting multi-session appending on rewritable media like DVD-RW or BD-RE.[21][1] Advanced options include RAW DAO for bit-precise replication of images containing deliberate errors, essential for certain archival or emulation tasks, and Packet Writing for incremental small-file updates on rewritable CDs/DVDs.[21] Write modes adapt to drive capabilities, with ImgBurn querying hardware support and warning if restricted, such as limiting to Incremental on drives lacking full DAO for specific media IDs.[22] This flexibility ensures broad compatibility across drives from manufacturers like BenQ, LG, and Pioneer, while test modes simulate burns to validate mode viability without media consumption.[1][22]Image Building and Handling
ImgBurn's Build mode facilitates the creation of disc image files from files and folders stored on a user's computer or network.[22] This process allows compilation of data into standardized formats suitable for optical media, such as ISO images, by organizing source files into a virtual disc structure.[23] Users access this functionality via the Build mode interface, where source files can be added through drag-and-drop or folder selection, enabling customization of the image layout including file systems like ISO9660, UDF, or Joliet for data discs.[24][25] The software supports direct output options in Build mode, including saving the generated image file to a hard drive or immediately writing it to a blank disc without intermediate storage.[24] For specialized media, ImgBurn accommodates video disc creation by processing folder structures such as VIDEO_TS for DVD Video, HVDVD_TS for HD DVD Video, and BDMV/BDAV for Blu-ray Video discs.[26] Advanced settings permit fine-tuning parameters like UDF revision levels and data types to ensure compatibility with target hardware and playback environments.[25] In terms of image handling, ImgBurn supports a range of formats for input and output, including BIN/CUE, DI, DVD, GI, IMG, ISO, MDS, NRG, and PDI, allowing users to read, convert, or burn existing images through complementary modes like Read and Write.[1][27] The Read mode extracts disc contents into these image formats, while Write mode burns them to media, with verification options to confirm integrity post-creation or handling.[28] This versatility extends to batch processing capabilities, where multiple images can be built or handled sequentially via scripting or command-line integration for automated workflows.[29]Verification and Quality Assurance
ImgBurn's Verify mode enables comprehensive post-burn checks by reading every sector on the disc to confirm the optical drive's ability to access all data without errors, thereby identifying unreadable or defective areas that could compromise playback or data retrieval.[30] When a reference image file is specified, the mode performs a sector-by-sector comparison against the original source, ensuring bit-for-bit accuracy and flagging mismatches attributable to writing flaws, media inconsistencies, or hardware limitations.[31] This process operates independently of the burning phase, supporting verification of discs created by other software, and generates detailed logs of any discrepancies for diagnostic purposes.[30] In Write and Build modes, users can enable automatic verification via a checkbox, which triggers the comparison immediately after the burn or compilation completes, minimizing the risk of undetected errors that might only surface during later use.[32] For added rigor, ImgBurn computes MD5 hashes of the disc contents during verification, allowing manual cross-referencing with the source file's hash to validate integrity without relying solely on sector reads.[33] Build mode extends this by recreating a virtual image from source files during verification, simulating the compilation process to detect file-level inconsistencies before or after writing.[34] Complementing verification, Test mode in Write or Build operations simulates the entire burning sequence without activating the laser, testing for buffer underruns, timing issues, or firmware incompatibilities that could degrade burn quality, thus preventing media waste on initial attempts.[32] Write speed controls further support quality assurance, with recommendations to use lower speeds (e.g., 4x-8x for DVDs) to reduce error rates on variable media quality, as higher speeds increase the likelihood of write failures detectable only via subsequent verification.[35] These features collectively emphasize empirical validation over assumptions of success, with forum users reporting that routine verification catches up to 10-20% of burns that would otherwise fail in real-world testing.[36]Technical Specifications
Supported Media and Formats
ImgBurn supports writing to a range of optical disc media, including compact disc (CD), digital versatile disc (DVD), high-definition DVD (HD DVD), and Blu-ray disc (BD) formats. This encompasses write-once media such as CD-R, DVD-R, DVD+R, HD DVD-R, and BD-R, as well as rewritable variants like CD-RW, DVD-RW, DVD+RW, HD DVD-RW, and BD-RE.[1] Support extends to multi-layer discs, including dual-layer DVDs (DVD-R DL and DVD+R DL) and Blu-ray discs up to triple-layer (BD-XL), provided compatible hardware is available.[1] HD DVD support, while included for legacy compatibility, pertains to an obsolete format phased out after 2008.[1] The software handles disc images in multiple formats for reading, building, and writing operations. Supported image file types include BIN (often paired with CUE for CDs), CCD, CDI, CUE, DI, DVD, GI, IMG, ISO, MDS, NRG, and PDI.[1] ISO files are commonly used for DVDs, Blu-rays, and data CDs, while BIN+CUE pairs are preferred for audio CDs to preserve track-level metadata.[1] For audio CD creation, ImgBurn decodes and burns tracks from source files supported by DirectShow or ACM filters, including AAC, APE, FLAC, M4A, MP3, MP4, MPC, OGG, PCM, WAV, WMA, and WV.[1] This allows conversion from compressed or lossless formats while maintaining CD-DA (Red Book) compliance for playback compatibility.[1] Video disc authoring follows industry standards: DVD Video using VIDEO_TS folder structures, HD DVD Video with HVDVD_TS folders, and Blu-ray Video via BDMV or BDAV directories.[1] File systems supported for data discs include ISO9660 (with Joliet extensions for Unicode filenames), UDF (revisions 1.02, 1.50, 2.00, 2.01, 2.50, and 2.60), and combinations thereof, enabling broad cross-platform readability.[1] UDF 1.02 is default for many DVD builds to maximize compatibility with consumer electronics.[37]Hardware Interface Compatibility
ImgBurn detects and interacts with optical drives primarily through the Windows SCSI Pass Through Interface (SPTI), which supports devices presenting as SCSI or ATAPI (Advanced Technology Attachment Packet Interface) targets.[38] This enables compatibility with internal drives connected via IDE/PATA (ATAPI) and SATA interfaces, as SATA controllers emulate SCSI/ATAPI protocols under AHCI mode.[39] SCSI-connected drives, common in enterprise or older professional setups, are also supported via SPTI, provided the system's drivers expose them correctly.[40] For broader compatibility, ImgBurn offers selectable I/O interfaces in its settings, including ASPI (via libraries like WinASPI) for legacy systems or drives requiring direct low-level access, and alternatives like ElbyCDIO for specific hardware conflicts.[38][41] SPTI requires administrator privileges on Windows NT-based systems (e.g., Windows 2000 and later) but avoids third-party ASPI installations, reducing potential instability.[42] Detection begins with a scan for SCSI/ATAPI devices upon launch, logging any failures due to driver issues, power problems, or incompatible enclosures.[43] External USB optical drives are compatible if the USB-to-optical bridge (e.g., via UASP or BOT protocols) emulates a standard SCSI/ATAPI device recognizable by Windows, allowing ImgBurn to access them seamlessly.[44][45] However, compatibility can falter with low-power USB bridges, faulty enclosures, or drives not fully enumerated in Device Manager, often resolvable by power cycling or interface switching.[43] ImgBurn does not support non-optical USB mass storage like flash drives for burning operations, limiting it to true optical hardware.[46] Less common interfaces, such as FireWire (IEEE 1394) or parallel port adapters, lack native support, as ImgBurn relies on Windows-standard drive enumeration without custom drivers for proprietary connections.[1] Users encountering detection issues with modern SATA or USB setups may need BIOS adjustments (e.g., enabling AHCI) or updated chipset drivers to ensure proper SCSI/ATAPI emulation.[47] Overall, ImgBurn's interface-agnostic design via SPTI ensures broad compatibility with post-1990s PC hardware, though success depends on underlying OS and driver fidelity.[2]Software Limitations and Constraints
ImgBurn enforces standard file system constraints during image building and disc authoring. For ISO9660, individual files are limited to a maximum size of 4 GB minus 1 byte, as exceeding this renders the file system incompatible with many optical drives and playback devices. Similarly, ISO9660 restricts directory depth to 8 levels and filenames to 31 characters (8.3 format), though ImgBurn mitigates some restrictions via Joliet extensions, which allow up to 64 Unicode characters per filename. Users bypassing these limits must opt for UDF file systems, which ImgBurn supports for handling files larger than 4 GB and deeper directory structures.[48][49][50] The software does not support multi-track image files, issuing an "Invalid or unsupported image file format" error when attempting to process them, restricting operations to single-track images only. Certain proprietary formats, such as .CDI, require external dependencies like the pfctoc.dll from Padus DiscJuggler for full compatibility; without it, ImgBurn cannot properly load or burn these files. Additionally, ImgBurn lacks native video transcoding or authoring tools, preventing direct conversion of source files like MP4 or AVI into DVD Video-compliant structures (e.g., MPEG-2 with VIDEO_TS folders). For instance, burning an MP4 file directly with ImgBurn creates a data disc that stores the file but lacks the DVD-Video format (MPEG-2 encoding and VIDEO_TS structure), so it will not play as standard video on most home DVD players.[51][52] Direct disc-to-disc copying is not implemented; all transfers require intermediate image file creation, and the software cannot decrypt protected content such as CSS-encrypted DVDs. Layer Jump Recording (LJR) for DVD-R DL media is unsupported, as it is deemed unreliable and incompatible with most drives, preventing custom layer break positioning on such discs without specialized hardware. Error handling during reads or writes is capped at 20 retries per sector, after which operations may fail or skip data.[35][21] Platform compatibility is constrained to Microsoft Windows operating systems from version 95 through 10 (both 32-bit and 64-bit), with features like SPTI device enumeration unavailable on pre-Windows XP SP3 systems. Native support for macOS or Linux is absent, though functionality on the latter can be achieved via Wine emulation. Administrative privileges are required for certain advanced settings, such as process priority adjustments or graph data logging on Vista and later with UAC enabled.[21][1]Distribution Practices
Official Download Process
The official download for ImgBurn is hosted on the developer's website, www.imgburn.com, maintained by Lightning UK!.[1] The software's current and final version, 2.5.8.0, was released on June 16, 2013, with no subsequent updates as of October 2025.[53][2] Users access the download via the dedicated page at imgburn.com/index.php?act=download, where the primary file is SetupImgBurn_2.5.8.0.exe, an installer approximately 3,870 KB in size.[53] This official mirror is located at download.imgburn.com/SetupImgBurn_2.5.8.0.exe, recommended to minimize risks from third-party hosting.[53] Alternative mirrors, such as those from digital-digest.com and betanews.com, are listed but have been associated with bundled adware in user reports, underscoring the preference for the direct official link.[53][5] To ensure file integrity post-download, the site provides cryptographic checksums: CRC32 (1AF3CD36), MD5 (4BF2B8F4B46385BFDA4D65E423CFB868), and SHA-1 (6A3D20796E1FCD4169D5D339AF6E491DCEA3367C).[53] Installation requires executing the downloaded .exe file as administrator on Windows systems; no separate uninstaller is needed beyond standard Windows removal.[53] Optional multilingual language files, such as for Arabic or Albanian, are available separately on the same page and must be manually extracted to the program's "Languages" subdirectory (e.g., C:\Program Files\ImgBurn\Languages) for use.[53] The installer itself incorporates OpenCandy, a monetization module that prompts optional third-party software offers during setup, classified by some security analyses as potentially unwanted but originating from the official distribution.[54] Users seeking an ad-free experience may opt for archived or extracted portable versions from trusted repositories, though these deviate from the endorsed process and require manual verification.[55]Bundled Components and Adware Inclusion
The official installer for ImgBurn version 2.5.8.0, released on June 16, 2013, incorporated OpenCandy, a third-party adware module designed to display optional software recommendations during the installation process.[56] This bundling allowed users to decline the offers explicitly, with OpenCandy configured to disable and self-delete itself upon completion if not accepted.[56] Developer Lightning UK! addressed user concerns by confirming OpenCandy's optional nature and providing multiple avoidance methods, including disconnecting from the internet prior to installation, invoking the/NOCANDY command-line parameter, blocking domains like *.opencandy.com via firewall rules, or extracting the standalone ImgBurn.exe from the installer archive using tools such as 7-Zip for portable deployment.[56] Silent installations via NSIS parameters, such as SetupImgBurn_2.5.8.0.exe /S /D=C:\Program Files\ImgBurn, also bypassed the module without requiring additional steps.[56]
Official mirror downloads distributed by ImgBurn excluded OpenCandy, differing from the primary installer hosted on imgburn.com.[56] Third-party sites, however, frequently repackaged ImgBurn with unrelated adware, potentially unwanted programs (PUPs), or malware, as reported in incidents involving mirrors like Digital Digest, underscoring the importance of sourcing from the official website to mitigate such risks.[5] User reports from 2020 onward indicate that direct official downloads yield adware-free installations, suggesting either removal of the module post-2013 or effective opt-out enforcement in updated installer variants.[57][58]
No other persistent bundled components appear in the official distribution beyond optional dependencies like the pfctoc.dll library from Padus for CDI image support, which requires separate manual acquisition.[1]
