Hello, everyone. I'm Wade Shearer, Vice President of User Experience at Workfront. Thanks for your engagement. It's incredibly valuable to read about your experiences using Workfront. It is a great privilege to be able to design a product that you use each day. That job involves making some hard decisions, which I recognize can be disruptive. Please know that undoing the right-click override isn't a decision we made lightly. We are committed to your success and are working on some big projects to deliver on that. Part of that includes modernizing, standardizing, and unifying the experience in all of our products. We've also committed to making our product accessible to those with disabilities. This change is part of delivering on those initiatives. It is something that we are continuing to research and monitor closely. If you're interested in some more technical details, I'm happy to share those with you: Occasionally, there are instances where overriding, changing, or removing default browser behavior may be justified; but generally, it is a not a good practice. Users rely on these standard conventions and it decreases usability and accessibility (related to keyboard-only navigation, screen readers, user agent assistive technologies, and touch-based devices). It's important that features such as browser search, keyboard shortcuts, back/forward behavior, favorites, and contextual menus respect the platform the browser runs on and are consistent and intuitive. There's a lot to consider as we are designing solutions for you and the rest of our wide community of users. We love the challenge though and the journey of going there together. For those of you that have been involved in research sessions with our team, thank you! We sincerely appreciate your time and expertise. If you haven't participated and would like to, our have colleagues that would, we'd love to connect and set something up. My best, Wade Wade Shearer Workfront