STOP LINE

 LINEが中国で個人情報漏の疑惑が発覚した

もともと韓国企業だったので、私は危ないと思って使っていなかったが、やはり心配したとおりの結果になった、ZOOMも同じです。

 LINE,PAYPAY,YAHOO、SOFTBANK,ZOOMなどは使うべきではありません

 





nikkei asia

Line silently exposed Japan user data to China affiliate

Wildly popular app failed to say so in its privacy policy

Line has around 86 million monthly active users in Japan -- equivalent to more than two-thirds of the country's total population.   © Reuters

Line Corp. made inadequate disclosures on foreign access to data in its privacy policy. The company has reported the incident to the Personal Information Protection Commission here and said it had already moved to end the Chinese affiliate's access. A third-party committee will soon be set up to investigate, according to a news release by Line on Wednesday.

The affiliate, Line Digital Technology (Shanghai), had four employees who could access user data from a server in Japan since August 2018. The data included names, phone numbers and identification numbers, as well as some messages that were reported by users to Line as inappropriate content. Line said the affiliate was given access to the extent required to perform its job. Line also said it did not know of any unauthorized access at this time.

However, Line said it had already denied Line Digital Technology (Shanghai) permission to access  some data between February and March, to "further raise the security level."

Line has around 86 million users in Japan, making it a major component of people's online lives.

Line's privacy policy states that personal data may be transferred to a third country. But it does not mention the possibility of overseas affiliates accessing such data.

In addition, there was not sufficient explanation about the work of foreign companies in monitoring the contents of the profile screen and its bulletin board function, called open chat. Line outsourced the monitoring to a domestic contractor, but it subcontracted the work to a company in Dalian, China.

Line does not appear to have violated Japan's Personal Information Protection Law, which stipulates that the user's consent should be obtained when transferring personal information overseas. But the impact to its reputation as a secure messaging app could be severe, and that could derail its efforts to create an all-in-one "superapp" after completing a merger with Yahoo Japan, an affiliate of SoftBank Group, in early March. 

Line plans to step up efforts to explain how it uses customer information, and revamp internal rules regarding access to sensitive data. It will also set up a special committee made up of security and privacy experts.

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