Security Flaw Confirmed in OpenOffice

By Ed Oswald | Published April 13, 2005, 12:11 PM

The makers of the OpenOffice.org productivity suite confirmed late Tuesday that a buffer overflow flaw does indeed exist in both the latest stable and beta versions of the software. The issue could potentially make its users vulnerable to code execution attacks.

Community manager, Louis Suarez-Potts, confirmed to eWeek Tuesday that the flaw did indeed exist and said it was caused when the program handles a specially written .doc file. "We learned of this March 31 and will be working on it immediately. A patch is ready but it is still going through [quality assurance] testing," he said.

Security firm Secunia calls the flaw "moderately critical," because while the bug is serious enough to cause compromising of data, it requires the user perform a certain set of actions in order for it to occur.

Suarez-Potts says a fix for the problem will likely be made available by the end of this week.

OpenOffice.org is an open source productivity suite that offers a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation software and a drawing program. The project began with code from the StarOffice suite and is supported by Sun Microsystems.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

Does this effect all versions of OpenOffice, or just the Windows version (since Windows is the big target for buffer overflow news these days)? I have OpenOffice installed on my XP Pro system and on my Kubuntu box...

Score: 0

|

It affects all operating systems. The problem has been fixed and a patch can be obtained at the CVS repository.

Score: 0

|

thanks =)

Score: 0

|

Secunia, don't answer right away, take at least 60 seconds and ponder this--would you deem this "Moderately Critical" if it were Microsoft? I mean c'mon, this is a buffer overflow vulnerability, historically almost every one of these are deemed critical even by Microsoft's terms. It's a free country here in the states--if you hate Microsoft just come out and say it rather than using your stupid rating system to play favorites...

Score: 0

|

You make a good point that OS apps get a pass on security by users and tech media for some reason, even though millions of people now rely on free software. But this is the second report this week of an old problem cropping up in new software. As long as it's fixed, I'll be happy again.

Score: 0

|

It's still flagged critical isn't it?

I'm sorry, I don't see your point.

Score: 0

|

huh? so should they state it as severely critical, or should MS be stated more as "moderately critical"

Score: 0

|

My point was that Secunia plays favorites with security ratings. Noticed that Microsoft has all of the "highly critical" vulnerabilities whilest OpenOffice.org and linux and the rest do not? I took this for more than what it was perhaps, I was angry at the time and strong emotion = weak brainpower :)

Score: 0

|

Microsoft launches Office 2010 technical beta a few days early

A big week for Microsoft starts off with an out-of-sync surprise: the early release of the Office Technical Beta ahead of the launch keynote.

PDC 2009 Day 0: Vista is through

If there was any doubt in your mind that Microsoft is putting Vista behind it, the first session at PDC would eliminate it for good.

Windows Marketplace for Mobile launches on WinMo 6.0 and 6.1

No longer isolated to Windows Mobile 6.5, the Windows Phone app store has opened up to older versions of Windows Mobile.

Samsung releases another Android: where will it fit in with Bada approaching?

Samsung today announced the Galaxy Spica, sequel to its first Android handset destined for Europe and Asia.

Twitter to abandon 'politically biased' suggested user list

Twitter's suggested list of users to follow will be going away, says co-founder Biz Stone.

The Internet can still be a positive force, World Wide Web Foundation says

Sir Tim Berners-Lee's World Wide Web Foundation has launched worldwide operations.

Blockbuster's way down, but poised for a comeback

Though it took a serious beating in 2009, Blockbuster CEO Jim Keyes says the company can turn it around.

iTunes Preview doesn't go far enough to create Web-based option for store

Apple has rolled out iTunes Preview, a Web interface for browsing iTunes.

PDC 2009 Preview: The move to Office 2010 and Visual Studio 2010

The major focus of Microsoft's conference next week will likely be explaining why two pillars of its software sales strategy deserve to remain where they are.

Dell's first smartphone aids the Android onslaught

Longtime PC leader Dell has finally announced its Android-based smarphone.

After the Intel + AMD armistice: Do we really want a level playing field?

Scott Fulton On Point: One by one, the reasons for us to continue suspending the course toward open and fair competition in IT, are dropping like flies.