LibreOffice 7.1.1 ha llegado corrigiendo más de 90 bugs y mejorando la compatibilidad

LibreOffice 7.1.1

Hace un mes, The Document Foundation lanzó una versión de su suite de ofimática que había retrasado, en parte, porque necesitó tiempo para explicar algo. Y es que, programado para la v7.0 y desde la v7.1, la alternativa libre al Office de Microsoft más popular ha introducido la etiqueta de «Community», algo que sirve para diferenciar lo que está mantenido por la comunidad que cuenta con menos soporte y la versión Enterprise. Sea como fuere, desde esta tarde hay una nueva versión: LibreOffice 7.1.1.

LibreOffice 7.1.1 es la primera actualización de punto de esta serie, lo que significa que ha llegado para pulir el software. Según The Document Foundation, esta entrega incluye más de 90 correcciones de errores y mejora la compatibilidad de los documentos, lo que suele significar que la importación/exportación desde o a Microsoft Office será ahora más fiable.

LibreOffice 7.1.1 sigue sin recomendarse para equipos de producción

The Document Foundation no menciona en la nota de este lanzamiento qué novedades ha incluido, en parte porque se han centrado en mejorar lo existente. Sí han aprovechado el momento para recordarnos que la mejor opción es la Enterprise, ya que incluye opciones long-term support, asistencia profesional, funciones bajo demanda o customizadas y otras bondades. Lógicamente, y como indica su etiqueta, esto merecerá la pena si hacemos un uso empresarial, pero no para los que usemos LibreOffice ocasionalmente.

El lanzamiento de LibreOffice 7.1.1 ya es oficial, por lo que ya podemos descargarlo desde la página de descargas del proyecto, a la que podemos acceder desde aquí. Como siempre, hay disponibles dos opciones, la v7.1.1 que incluye todas las novedades y la v7.0.4, que va un poco por detrás en funciones, pero por delante en estabilidad. Por ese motivo, TDF ofrece la segunda para equipos de producción.

En cuanto a lo que podemos descargar desde allí los usuarios de Linux, tenemos paquetes RPM, DEB y el código. Pronto llegará la actualización a Flathub y a algunos canales de algunas distribuciones, como el «fresh» que usan las basadas en Arch Linux.

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Three Top Russian Cybercrime Forums Hacked

Over the past few weeks, three of the longest running and most venerated Russian-language online forums serving thousands of experienced cybercriminals have been hacked. In two of the intrusions, the attackers made off with the forums’ user databases, including email and Internet addresses and hashed passwords.

References to the leaked Mazafaka crime forum database were posted online in the past 48 hours.

On Tuesday, someone dumped thousands of usernames, email addresses and obfuscated passwords on the dark web apparently pilfered from Mazafaka (a.k.a. “Maza,” “MFclub“), an exclusive crime forum that has for more than a decade played host to some of the most experienced and infamous Russian cyberthieves.

At the top of a 35-page PDF leaked online is a private encryption key allegedly used by Maza administrators. The database also includes ICQ numbers for many users. ICQ, also known as “I seek you,” was an instant message platform trusted by countless early denizens of these older crime forums before its use fell out of fashion in favor of more private networks, such as Jabber and Telegram.

This is notable because ICQ numbers tied to specific accounts often are a reliable data point that security researchers can use to connect multiple accounts to the same user across many forums and different nicknames over time.

Cyber intelligence firm Intel 471 assesses that the leaked Maza database is legitimate, and that the file includes more than 3,000 rows containing usernames, partially obfuscated password hashes, email addresses and other contact details.

“The file comprised more than 3,000 rows, containing usernames, partially obfuscated password hashes, email addresses and other contact details,” Intel 471 found, noting that Maza forum visitors are now redirected to a breach announcement page. “Initial analysis of the leaked data pointed to its probable authenticity, as at least a portion of the leaked user records correlated with our own data holdings.”

The attack on Maza comes just weeks after another major Russian crime forum got plundered. On Jan. 20, a longtime administrator of the Russian language forum Verified disclosed that the community’s domain registrar had been hacked, and that the site’s domain was redirected to an Internet server the attackers controlled.

A note posted by a Verified forum administrator concerning the hack of its registrar in January.

“Our [bitcoin] wallet has been cracked. Luckily, we did not keep large amounts in it, but this is an unpleasant incident anyway. Once the circumstances became clear, the admin assumed that THEORETICALLY, all the forum’s accounts could have been compromised (the probability is low, but it is there). In our business, it’s better to play safe. So, we’ve decided to reset everyone’s codes. This is not a big deal. Simply write them down and use them from now on.”

A short time later, the administrator updated his post, saying:

“We are getting messages that the forum’s databases were filched after all when the forum was hacked. Everyone’s account passwords were forcibly reset. Pass this information to people you know. The forum was hacked through the domain registrar. The registrar was hacked first, then domain name servers were changed, and traffic was sniffed.”

On Feb. 15, the administrator posted a message purportedly sent on behalf of the intruders, who claimed they hacked Verified’s domain registrar between Jan. 16 and 20.

“It should be clear by now that the forum administration did not do an acceptable job with the security of this whole thing,” the attacker explained. “Most likely just out of laziness or incompetence, they gave up the whole thing. But the main surprise for us was that they saved all the user data, including cookies, referrers, ip addresses of the first registrations, login analytics, and everything else.”

The compromise of Maza and Verified — and possibly a third major forum — has many community members concerned that their real-life identities could be exposed. Exploit — perhaps the next-largest and most popular Russian forum after Verified, also experienced an apparent compromise this week.

According to Intel 471, on March 1, 2021, the administrator of the Exploit cybercrime forum claimed that a proxy server the forum used for protection from distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks might have been compromised by an unknown party. The administrator stated that on Feb. 27, 2021, a monitoring system detected unauthorized secure shell access to the server and an attempt to dump network traffic.

Some forum lurkers have speculated that these recent compromises feel like the work of some government spy agency.

“Only intelligence services or people who know where the servers are located can pull off things like that,” mused one mainstay of Exploit. “Three forums in one month is just weird. I don’t think those were regular hackers. Someone is purposefully ruining forums.”

Others are wondering aloud which forum will fall next, and bemoaning the loss of trust among users that could be bad for business.

“Perhaps they work according to the following logic,” wrote one Exploit user. “There will be no forums, there will be no trust between everyone, less cooperation, more difficult to find partners – fewer attacks.”

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Xiaomi Redmi Note 10S: el hermano mediano de la familia da el salto al AMOLED y presume de miliamperios

Xiaomi Redmi Note 10S: el hermano mediano de la familia da el salto al AMOLED y presume de miliamperios

La gama media de Xiaomi no para de crecer. En 2020 tuvimos la prolífica gama Redmi 9 y ahora que estamos 2021 tocaba renovar. Hoy Xiaomi ha anunciado la familia que invadirá las tiendas a lo largo del año y lo hacen con tres modelos: Xiaomi Redmi Note 10 Pro, Xiaomi Redmi Note 10 y el modelo que nos ocupa en este artículo, el Xiaomi Redmi Note 10S.

Xiaomi repite la estrategia del año pasado y, junto con los modelos normal y ‘pro’, nos trae una variante S. El Xiaomi Redmi Note 10S se sitúa a medio camino entre sus hermanos de presentación, con los que comparte más parecidos que diferencias, pero veamos que es todo lo que nos ofrece este smartphone candidato a pelear por el trono de la gama media en 2021.


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