Line (software)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
LINE
LINE New App Icon (2020-12).png
LINE screenshot.png
Screenshot featuring the "LINE Friends" stickers
Developer(s)LINE Corporation
Initial releaseJune 23, 2011 (2011-06-23)
Stable release(s)
Android11.15.0[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 30 August 2021; 18 days ago (30 August 2021)[2]
iOS11.13.0[3] Edit this on Wikidata / 30 August 2021; 18 days ago (30 August 2021)[4]
Windows7.1.0.2585 Edit this on Wikidata / 6 August 2021; 42 days ago (6 August 2021)[5]
macOS7.1.0[6] Edit this on Wikidata / 10 August 2021; 38 days ago (10 August 2021)[7]
Chrome2.4.6[8] Edit this on Wikidata / 8 August 2021; 40 days ago (8 August 2021)[9]
Repositorygithub.com/line
Operating system
Operating system
PlatformSmartphone, PC, iPad, Smartwatch
Size
Size
Available in17 languages[4]
List of languages
TypeInstant messaging, Social networking service
LicenseProprietary software
Websiteline.me/en/

LINE is a freeware app for instant communications on electronic devices such as smartphones, tablet computers, and personal computers. LINE users exchange texts, images, video and audio, and conduct free VoIP conversations and video conferences. In addition, LINE is a platform providing various services including digital wallet as LINE Pay, news stream as LINE Today, video on demand as LINE TV, and digital comic distribution as LINE Manga and LINE Webtoon. The service is operated by LINE Corporation, a Tokyo-based subsidiary of Softbank Group and the Seoul-based Naver Corporation.

LINE began as a disaster response. In March 2011, the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami damaged Japan's telecommunications infrastructure nationwide, obliging employees at NHN Japan to rely on Internet-based resources to communicate. The company's engineers developed LINE to facilitate this, and the company released their app for public use in June 2011.[10] LINE reached 100 million users within eighteen months and 200 million users only six months later.[11] LINE became Japan's largest social network in 2013. In October 2014, LINE announced that it had attracted 560 million users worldwide with 170 million active user accounts.[12][13] In February 2015, it announced the 600 million users mark had been passed and 700 million were expected by the end of the year.[14] In March 2021, SoftBank Group affiliate Z Holdings completed a merger with Line Corporation. Under the new structure, A Holdings, a subsidiary of SoftBank Corporation, will own 65.3% of Z Holdings. In effect, Z Holdings will become a consolidated subsidiary of SoftBank Corporation and own LINE and Yahoo!Japan.[15] LINE is the most popular messaging application in Japan, Taiwan and Thailand.[16][17]

History[]

LINE was originally developed as a mobile application for Android and iOS smartphones. The service has since expanded to BlackBerry OS (August 2012),[18] Nokia Asha (Asia and Oceania, March 2013),[19][20] Windows Phone (July 2013),[21] Firefox OS (February 2014),[22] iOS tablets (October 2014), and as a Chrome Browser Application (via the Chrome Web Store). The application also exists in versions for laptop and desktop computers using the Microsoft Windows and macOS platforms.[citation needed].

The application proved hugely popular, and by late October, LINE experienced an unexpected server overload.[23] After concluding that the scalability process needed to be improved, NHN Japan chose to adopt HBase as the primary storage for user profiles, contacts, and groups.[24] Within eighteen months of its release, LINE reached 100 million users; six months later, it reached 200 million[25][11][10] and by November 25, 2013, was used by 300 million users.[26]

On July 3, 2012, NHN Japan announced the new LINE features Home and Timeline. The features allowed users to share recent personal developments to a community of contacts in real-time, similar to the status updates in social networking services such as Facebook.[27]

On March 17, 2021, the Asahi Shim-bun reported that all image / video data of LINE users and LINE Pay transaction information are stored on a South Korean server. This information was authorized to be accessed by employees of LINE Plus, a Korean subsidiary of LINE. The current privacy policy is difficult for users to understand and the situation is not fully communicated, so LINE will review the description and transfer the data to Japan (specific date unknown) . In addition, personal information such as names, telephone numbers, email addresses, talk histories, and IDs of all users can be viewed from NHN Service Technology, a consignment company in Dalian, China. It was reported by the newspaper. Chief Cabinet Secretary Kato said at a press conference on the morning of the 17th, "The relevant government agencies will confirm the facts and take appropriate measures." Regarding this, LINE Co., Ltd. was only able to view and monitor Japanese user information from Chinese consignment companies, but not access to information on foreign users such as Koreans and Chinese. LINE says that there is no legal problem with this business system itself at this time, but the Personal Information Protection Law stipulates that the consent of the user should be obtained when it is necessary to transfer personal information to a foreign country. Therefore, it will be reported to the Personal Information Protection Commission of the Cabinet Office and asked for its decision. Furthermore, what is most worrisome in this case is that it happened at a "Chinese consignment company" that is obliged to provide user information at the request of the state, that is, the Chinese government "always knows personal information". It has been pointed out as a major problem that it is placed under "obtaining circumstances" [110] [111]. LINE was used by the Japanese government and local governments as a means of providing administrative services and notifying new coronaviruses [106] [112]. In response to these reports, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications announced at a press conference that it would stop using the LINE service on March 19 and request each local government to investigate the usage status.

Creation[]

As its competitor Kakao dominated the South Korean messaging market, Naver Corporation launched a messenger application NAVER Talk in February 2011 in South Korea. However, because the South Korean messaging market was dominated by Kakao, the business of NAVER Talk was suppressed. Naver Corporation was expanding their messaging application and targeted other countries' messaging markets which had not been developed yet. Naver Corporation released their messaging application, which changed its name to 'LINE', to the Japanese messaging market in 2011. As LINE became a huge success, finally NAVER combined NAVER Talk and LINE in March 2012.[28][29] They changed NAVER's Japanese branch name from NHN JAPAN to LINE Corporation. LINE reached 100 million users within eighteen months and 200 million users only six months later.[11] LINE became Japan's largest social network in 2013. In October 2014, LINE announced that it had attracted 560 million users worldwide with 170 million active user accounts.[12][30] In February 2015, it announced the 600 million users mark had been passed and 700 million were expected by the end of the year.[31] LINE was originally developed as a mobile application for Android and iOS smartphones. The service has since expanded to BlackBerry OS (August 2012),[32] Nokia Asha (Asia and Oceania, March 2013),[19][33] Windows Phone (July 2013),[34] Firefox OS (February 2014),[35] iOS tablets (October 2014), and as a Chrome Browser Application (via the Chrome Web Store). The application also exists in versions for laptop and desktop computers using the Microsoft Windows and macOS platforms.[citation needed]

Market share[]

Line began in Spring 2011 as a communication system for NHN Japan employees. It then saw explosive growth when released to the public in June of that year. By 18 January 2013, Line had been downloaded 100 million times worldwide.[36] The number expanded to 140 million by early July 2013 and to 200 million by July 21.[37] As of June 2016, Japan claimed 68 million users while Thailand had 33 million.[38] As of February 2014, Indonesia had 20 million users, Taiwan 17 million, while India and Spain had 16 million each.[39] NHN representatives announced plans to reach 300 million by further expansion in East Asia, Spain, and Chile.[40] In April 2014, Naver announced that Line had reached 400 million worldwide users,[41] and by 2017 this had grown to 700 million.[42]

Features[]

Line is an application that works on multiple platforms and has access via multiple personal computers (Windows or macOS). The application will also give an option of address book syncing. This application also has a feature to add friends through the use of QR codes, by Line ID, and by shaking phones simultaneously. The application has a direct pop-out message box for reading and replying to make it easy for users to communicate. It also can share photos, videos and music with other users, send the current or any specific location, voice audio, emojis, stickers and emoticons to friends. Users can see a real-time confirmation when messages are sent and received or use a hidden chat feature, which can hide and delete a chat history (from both involved devices and Line servers) after a time set by the user.[43] The application also makes free voice and video calls. Users can also chat and share media in a group by creating and joining groups that have up to 500 people. Chats also provide bulletin boards on which users can post, like, and comment. This application also has timeline and homepage features that allow users to post pictures, text and stickers on their homepages. Users can also change their Line theme to the theme Line provides in the theme shop for free or users can buy other famous cartoon characters they like. Line also has a feature, called a Snap movie, that users can use to record a stop-motion video and add in provided background music.

In January 2015, Line Taxi was released in Tokyo as a competitor to Uber.[44][45][46] Line launched a new android app called "Popcorn buzz" in June 2015. The app facilitates group calls with up to 200 members.[47] In June a new Emoji keyboard was also released for iOS devices, which provides a Line-like experience with the possibility to add stickers.[48] In September 2015 a new Android launcher was released on the Play Store, helping the company to promote its own services through the new user interface.[49]

Official channels[]

Line includes a feature known as "official channels" which allows companies, especially news media outlets, publications, and other mass media companies, to offer an official channel, which users can join, and thereby receive regular updates, published articles, or news updates from companies or news outlets. [50] [51]

Stickers[]

Line features a Sticker Shop where users are able to purchase virtual stickers depicting original and well-known characters. The stickers are used during chat sessions between users and act as large emoji. Users can purchase stickers as gifts, with many stickers available as free downloads, depending on country availability. Purchased stickers are attached to an account and can be used on other platforms. New sticker sets are released weekly. Line's message stickers feature original characters as well as a number of popular manga, anime and gaming characters, movie tie-ins, and characters from Disney properties such as Pixar. Some sticker sets, such as those that celebrate special events like the 2012 Summer Olympics, are released for only a limited time.

The original default characters and stickers, known as the LINE Friends, were created by Kang Byeongmok, also known as "Mogi", in 2011.[52][53]

There are over 1 billion stickers sent by worldwide users on a daily basis.[54]

Games[]

NHN Japan created LINE Games in 2011. Only those with a LINE application account can install and play LINE games. Players can connect with friends, send and accept items, and earn friend points. The game range includes puzzles, match-three, side-scroller, musical performance, simulation, battle, and spot-the-difference games. In September 2013, Line Corporation announced its games had been downloaded 200 million times worldwide.[55]

On July 10, 2017, LINE Games acquired NextFloor Corporation, developers of Dragon Flight and Destiny Child.[56] On January 5, 2017, LINE Games was announced as the publisher for Hundred Soul (formerly known as Project 100) by Hound 13.[57]

On December 12, 2018, LINE Games held a media event called LPG (LINE Games-Play-Game) to introduce its games for 2019. Mobile games announced include: Exos Heroes (by OOZOO), Ravenix: The Card Master (also by OOZOO), Dark Summoners (by SkeinGlobe), Project PK (by Rock Square), Super String (by Factorial Games). Project NM by Space Dive was also announced for PC. Games to be released on mobile and PC include: Project NL (by MeerKat Games) and Uncharted Waters Origins (by LINE Games and Koei Tecmo).[58]

On 10 Jul 2019, Nintendo released Dr. Mario World co-developed by LINE Games.[59] On July 18, 2019, First Summoner developed by SkeinGlobe was released.

Line Pay[]

Line introduced Line Pay worldwide on December 16, 2014. The service allows users to request and send money from users in their contact list and make mobile payments in store.[60] The service has since expanded to allow other features such as offline wire transfers when making purchases and ATM transactions like depositing and withdrawing money. Unlike other Line services, Line Pay is offered worldwide through the Line app.

Line Taxi[]

Line Taxi was launched in January 2015 in partnership with Nihon Kotsu, a local taxi service in Japan.[61] Just like Line Pay, Line Taxi is not offered as a separate app but rather through the Line app where users can request a taxi and automatically pay for it when they connect their account to Line Pay.[62]

Line Wow[]

Announced alongside Line Pay and Line Taxi, a service that allows users to instantly access delivery services for registered food or products and services.[63]

Line Today[]

A news hub integrated in the Line app.

Line Shopping[]

A referral program for online shopping. Customers get extra discount or earn Line Points by purchasing through the Line Shopping service.

Line Lite[]

Line Lite
LINE Lite logo.svg
Developer(s)Line Corporation
Stable release
2.17.0 / 2021-03-31 [64]
Repository
Operating systemAndroid
Size8.89 MB
Websiteline.me Edit this on Wikidata

In 2015, a lower-overhead Android app was released for emerging markets called Line Lite. This supports messages and calls[65] but not themes or timeline.[66] It became available worldwide in August 2015.[67]

Limitations[]

For Asian countries. Line accounts can be accessed on only one mobile device (running the app version), plus one personal computer (running the version for those). Additional mobile devices can install the app but require different mobile numbers or e-mail addresses for the Line account.[68][69]

If "LINE Lite" for Android is installed and activated, the user is told they will be "logged out of the normal LINE". This message does not make clear that it is impossible to log back in to the normal LINE, and the normal LINE will delete all history data when next launched.[70]

Security[]

In August 2013, it was possible to intercept a Line chat session at the network level using packet capture software and to reconstruct it on a PC. Messages were sent in clear text to Line's server when on cellular data but encrypted when using Wi-Fi most of the time.[71]

Until February 2016, it was also possible to "clone" an iPhone from a backup, and then use the "cloned" iPhone to access the same Line account as used by the original iPhone. This loophole was widely rumored (but never proven) to have been used to intercept Line messages between the popular Japanese television personality Becky and her married romantic partner Enon Kawatani; the intercepted messages were published in the magazine Shukan Bunshun and led to the temporary suspension of Becky's television career.[72]

In July 2016, Line Corporation turned on end-to-end encryption by default for all Line users.[73] It had earlier been available as an opt-in feature since October 2015.[74] The app uses the ECDH protocol for client-to-client encryption.[74] In August 2016, Line expanded its end-to-end encryption to also encompass its group chats, voice calls and video calls.[75]

In March 2021, the Japanese government announced that it would investigate Line after reports that engineers in Shanghai accessed Japanese users' data without consent.[76]

12 April 2021 Line suffered large-scale crash in Taiwan.[77] Unconfirmed reports suggest that Roman Matovsky hacked the company's servers because of a personal conflict with the company. He wrote about it on his personal blog shortly after the platform's services resumed, asserting why and what he claimed happened.[78]And additionally left comments consistent with this in his social network profiles, which he subsequently removed the next day.[79][80]

Censorship[]

Line suppressed content in China to conform with government censorship.[81] Analysis by Citizen Lab showed that accounts registered with Chinese phone numbers download a list of banned words that cannot be sent or received through Line.[82]

Line publicly confirmed the practice in December 2013.[83] However, by 2014, access to Line chat servers has been entirely blocked by the Great Firewall, while the company still makes revenue in China from brick-and-mortar stores.[84][85]

In Indonesia, Line has responded to pressure from the Indonesian Communication and Information Ministry to remove emojis and stickers it believes make reference to homosexuality, for example the emoji "two men holding hands". Line issued a public statement on the issue: "Line regrets the incidents of some stickers which are considered sensitive by many people. We ask for your understanding because at the moment we are working on this issue to remove the stickers".[86]

In Thailand, Line is suspected of responding to pressure from the Thai government and, after previously approving 'Red Buffalo' stickers, which had been used to refer to the Red Shirts political faction, including by the Red Shirts themselves, removed the stickers.[87][88]

In Russia, on 3 May 2017 access to Line chat servers was entirely blocked by the Roskomnadzor and the Line servers were added to the Unified Register of Banned Sites, after which Russian users began to experience problems receiving and sending messages.[89]

In popular culture[]

On November 20, 2012, Line was shown in Far East Movement's music video, featuring Sidney Samson, for the song "Change Your Life". DJ Virman is seen chatting with Sidney Samson at the middle of the music video.[90]

On December 16, 2012, the Line application was shown in American rap artist Big Sean's music video for the song "Guap".[91]

On May 16, 2014, Warner Music Italy released the music video for Italian singer Annalisa's "Sento solo il presente", in which the recording artist is seen using the Line application at the beginning of the video.[92]

In 2014, the LINE app was featured in Cycle 21 of America's Next Top Model.

The app had a significant presence in the popular Korean TV drama My Love from the Star.

The app is heavily featured in the visual novel Steins;Gate 0 under the name "Rine". Naver Corporation and Mages also partnered during the Steins;Gate 5th Anniversary Goods Project.

In the 2016 anime film Your Name, male protagonist Taki Tachibana uses Line to communicate.

In the 2017 anime Tsuki ga Kirei, the Line app is the protagonists' main way of communication.[93]

The 2017 original anime series Just Because! uses Line extensively throughout the series as a method of communication between characters.

In the Webtoon 'Age Matters' by Enjelicious, Line is referred to as Lime Corp, a company which the protagonist Daniel is the CEO of.

In 2019 it was featured in Don't Toy With Me, Miss Nagatoro.

In the visual novel Tsuki no Kanata de Aimashou, LINE was referenced as LIME.

LINE has collaborated with the Supercell to add their characters as cosmetics in Supercell’s mobile game, Brawl Stars.

Related products[]

Line Friends[]

Line Friends Store in Hysan Place, Hong Kong

Line Friends are featured characters that are shown in stickers of the application. They include Brown, Cony, Sally, James, Moon, Boss, Jessica, Edward, Leonard, Choco, Pangyo and Rangers. Two anime series, LINE OFFLINE and LINE TOWN, were produced in 2013, picturing the Line Friends as employees for the fictional Line Corporation.

Line Man[]

On-demand assistant for food and messenger delivery services in Bangkok.

Line TV[]

A video on demand service operating in Taiwan and Thailand.

Stores[]

There are physical stores in Japan, South Korea, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand, U.S. and a Korean online store to purchase LINE Friends merchandise.[94] Occasionally, LINE will have pop-up or temporary stores globally.

See also[]

References[]

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External links[]

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