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.
Vine’s six-second videos are making a comeback with the launch of a new app, diVine, backed by former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey ...
The app, now called DiVine, is launching with a twist aimed at keeping artificial intelligence out of the feed.
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 inspiration to bring back Divine has its roots in the Revolution.Social podcast, which is hosted by Henshaw-Plath under ...
"A social media platform that doesn't allow AI-generated content is something the world actually needs right now." ...
1don MSN
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 ...
Former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is backing the relaunched app that includes more than 100,000 archived Vine videos.
Vine reboots as diVine, thanks to funding from Jack Dorsey s nonprofit organization, “and Other Stuff." This lets users post ...
Futurism on MSN
Jack Dorsey Releases Vine Reboot Where AI Content Is Banned
Twitter co-founder and blockchain evangelist Jack Dorsey has revived the six-second video platform, Vine — well, sort of.
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