You can see man bugs were fixed in the latest release.
What may sound dreadful to you might be interesting for someone else.
While capitalism sounds nice in practice, it results in the destruction of the planet because the profit motive eats everything alive and leaves nothing behind for future generations.
The majority of those bug fixes are from people who probably were paid by companies to work on them.
A couple of people with a bunch of fixes attributed to them seem to work for Red Hat, and several contributors have Collabora email addresses. A fair bunch of fixes would seem to be from members of a LibreOffice team at some company (based on bugzilla comments and email addresses). One contributor seems to be from a company that does consulting related to LibreOffice.
A few fixes are from people registered with what look like private email addresses or with email addresses associated with the LibreOffice or other open source projects themselves. But they seem to be a minority.
That doesn't mean it can't be interesting to those people, or to many people, but it also doesn't mean most of the fixes were motivated by that alone.
(Also, fixing bugs is different than QA.)
> While capitalism sounds nice in practice, it results in the destruction of the planet because the profit motive eats everything alive and leaves nothing behind for future generations.
As always, that doesn't mean communism (or some other supposed polar opposite) would work. Or that those are the two possible binary options.
However, here are the list of release notes for LibreOffice: https://www.libreoffice.org/download/release-notes/
You can see man bugs were fixed in the latest release.
What may sound dreadful to you might be interesting for someone else.
While capitalism sounds nice in practice, it results in the destruction of the planet because the profit motive eats everything alive and leaves nothing behind for future generations.