Japan govt halts use of message app Line for sensitive information
March 30, 2021
The Japanese government has decided to temporarily halt its use of popular messaging app Line, owned by SoftBank Corp’s Z Holdings, to handle sensitive information, Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said on Monday.
The decision comes after domestic media reports this month that four engineers at a Line affiliate in Shanghai were allowed to access servers in Japan from 2018 that contained the names, telephone numbers and e-mail addresses of users.
Following the reports, a spokesman for Line, which has 186 million users worldwide, said the company has since blocked access to user data at the Chinese affiliate.
“The government will halt the use of Line when handling sensitive information for now, and set up a task force swiftly, so that usage guidelines can be compiled soon,” Kato told a regular news conference.
Reuters
Bring stories like this into your inbox every day.
Sign up for our newsletter – The Daily Brief
Related Stories
Asia Digest: KKR buys Hyundai Global stake, Kyulux bags $34.3m, LINE’s ‘smartphone bank’
KKR has acquired a 38% stake in Hyundai Global Service for $723m.
SoftBank’s Vision Fund markets itself to potential investments as offering a gateway to Japanese markets.