Line2

A phone number was never meant to be an all-access pass to your life.

That’s why Line2 was made to protect consumers’ privacy. Line2 is an affordable second phone line app that acts as a buffer and gives back control. Whether it鈥檚 dating online, capturing discount codes, or defending against spam, Line2鈥檚 ad-free solution can control incoming calls, provide local number options, and freely call, text, and block straight from an existing device. Plus, Line2 works over WiFi, 4G, and LTE for the most reliable connection to stay connected anytime, anywhere.

55MM+ Calls Annually

55.5 million calls annually

49MM+ SMS Messages Annually

49.5 million SMS messages annual

40K Active Users

40 thousand active users

Recent News

Morningstar  
"Consumers shouldn't have to piece together multiple tools to stay safe online," said Subbu Sthanu, General Manager of Consumer Security offerings at 福利姬视频. "Our goal is to provide complete digital life protection, and Threat Protection Pro is a key step in that evolution. By unifying security across the browser, cloud, network, and system鈥攃ore layers of modern defense鈥攊nto one cohesive experience, we're transforming IPVanish into a comprehensive platform that delivers advanced protection seamlessly while giving users greater visibility and control."
TechRadar  
In the report, Ookla put Apple鈥檚 C1X modem 鈥 which you鈥檒l find in the iPhone Air 鈥 through its paces. And as the results show, its performance is so good that Ookla believes Apple fans are getting 鈥渢rue download parity鈥 with Qualcomm鈥檚 market-leading X80 chip. Compared to iPhones with the X80 and those using Apple鈥檚 previous-generation C1 chip, Apple has 鈥渟et new standards for network latency,鈥 Ookla believes...According to the benchmark results, the iPhone Air鈥檚 C1X outperformed the iPhone 17 Pro Max for latency in 19 out of the 22 markets that Ookla tested.
CBS News  
NVIDIA's GTC conference brought big crowds to Silicon Valley this week, with hundreds of companies showcasing products powered by NVIDIA's chips. Tim Werth, tech editor at Mashable, joined CBS News to discuss.
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