Consider the category whose objects are $C^\ast$-algebras and for which the morphisms between $A$ and $B$ are the $\ast$-homomorphisms $\phi$ from $A$ into the multiplier algebra $M(B)$ such that $\overline{\operatorname{span}\phi(A)B}$ is dense in $B$. Note that these morphisms can be extended in a unique way to strictly continuous $\ast$-homomorphisms from $M(A)$ to $M(B)$ so that composition makes sense.
If one restricts to commutative $C^\ast$-algebras, this category is dual to the category of locally compact Hausdorff spaces with all (not only proper) continuous maps as morphisms, which makes it natural from the viewpoint of "noncommutative topology". For example, this notion of morphisms is used in the definition of locally compact quantum groups.
Question: Does this category have finite coproducts?
It does not seem like the usual free product $A\ast B$ does the job since this comes with $\ast$-homomorphisms $A,B\to A\ast B$ (not into the multiplier algebra), and I see no reason to assume this would be true for the coproduct in the category described above.