What if Vine were more like TV? The beauty and purpose of Vine was the creation of tiny, six second videos; self-contained moments of interest and, often, absurdity. Now Vine, which is owned by ...
Before TikTok, there was Vine. Now its successor diVine is on app stores, and the man who helped build Twitter is behind it.
Andy Warhol famously predicted that in the future, everyone would be famous for 15 minutes. In the case of Vine, however, that formula was often reduced to six seconds. The video-sharing app’s ...
Vine is back. Sort of. Which is a strange sentence to say in 2026. Almost a decade after the popular short-form video app had ...
Two defunct social media platforms are getting revived this week: Vine and Friendster. But the new versions each have a twist ...
Divine, a Vine reboot backed by Jack Dorsey’s nonprofit, revives six-second looping videos.
Twitter will “discontinue” Vine, its looping six-second video app, the company announced Thursday morning. It’s a cost-saving move that coincided with Twitter laying off about nine percent of its ...
Vine is officially shutting down today on iOS, Android, and Windows Phone. In its place, users can update to the Vine Camera app: a pared-back offering that lacks the social networking features ...
Let’s get one thing straight: Vine was always the weird little second cousin of the internet—populated with a hodgepodge of young black and brown users that it never meant to court. After Twitter’s ...