Short-form video social media platform Vine will be coming to an end. Twitter made the announcement Thursday in a blog post, saying that "in the coming months we'll be discontinuing the mobile app." ...
You may have heard through the grapevine that a certain app may soon be revived. The Vine app was among the most popular apps of the vintage social media era. Elon Musk is heading this Vine revival, ...
Vine Coin (VINE), the native cryptocurrency of the now-dormant Vine video app, logged a significant rally in the last few hours. The surge in the token's price was triggered after Tesla CEO Elon Musk ...
Before TikTok, six-second video app Vine was the king of short videos. Now, Vine may be looking to take back its crown. Nearly nine years after the beloved app was shut down by its parent company ...
Jack Dorsey, the former head of Twitter who killed short-video app Vine back in 2016, is reviving it nearly a decade later — kind of. The reboot app, diVine, will give users access to an archive of ...
Elon Musk says he is looking into bringing back beloved social media app, Vine. Video is one of the most dominant ways people consume content these days. YouTube, Instagram, Snapchat, and many other ...
Former Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey is funding a new mobile app called “diVine” that will provide users with the ability to view over 100,000 archived videos from the now-defunct micro video-sharing ...
Twitter has confirmed that it will be shutting down Vine on Tuesday, January 17. Users have until this date to save their videos before they all disappear, while the Vine app for mobile will live on ...