TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Line Corp said its number of monthly active users fell from the previous quarter, its first such decline, underscoring the messaging app operator's struggles to grow outside ...
Line, a maker of a popular mobile messaging system used largely in Japan, Friday filed to sell shares to the public in what's expected to be the largest global deal since Alibaba. The company, which ...
According to Nikkei, messaging app Line and Yahoo Japan are about to merge and form a single tech company. Despite the name, Yahoo Japan is currently 100% owned by Z Holdings, a company that is ...
Line, Japan’s number one super app, has launched its own NFT marketplace, adding to its list of crypto-ready features. Japan’s largest social media application, Line, has officially launched its own ...
Line has already applied for an initial public offering in Tokyo, but the app's parent company reportedly has its eyes on Wall Street. CNET contributor Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has ...
Messaging is no longer just about messaging. Last year saw the West wake up to the potential of messaging apps — largely thanks to Facebook’s acquisition of WhatsApp — and 2015 is the year that U.S.
Line—the messaging app that is dominant in its home market of Japan and also a hit in Indonesia, Taiwan, and Thailand—is making a home for itself in New York. It launched a Times Square flagship store ...