Before TikTok, six-second video app Vine was the king of short videos. Now, Vine may be looking to take back its crown.
A new app called DiVine has launched as a reboot of Vine, with thousands of classic clips and even blocks AI video uploads.
W hen Twitter, now X, shut down Vine in 2017, users thought its six-second videos were gone forever—but now, the former CEO ...
Road work ahead’ for new app. In 4 hours, 10,000 beta testers signed up to embrace the nostalgia of 170,000 archived vines ...
The app, now called DiVine, is launching with a twist aimed at keeping artificial intelligence out of the feed.
"A social media platform that doesn't allow AI-generated content is something the world actually needs right now." ...
The inspiration to bring back Divine has its roots in the Revolution.Social podcast, which is hosted by Henshaw-Plath under ...

Vine Is Back

The new app, Divine, includes an archive of as many as 200,000 original Vine videos. Users can upload new six-second long ...
Vine is coming back — sort of. Former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, who shut down Vine in 2017, is backing a new version of the ...
To the dismay of many online, the video app Vine shut down in 2017. The app’s central six-second time limit tested its users’ ...
Vine reboots as diVine, thanks to funding from Jack Dorsey s nonprofit organization, “and Other Stuff." This lets users post ...
Former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is backing the relaunched app that includes more than 100,000 archived Vine videos.