
"SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Millennials, you'll remember this video sharing app: Vine. Predating TikTok, Vine was where shortform video gained their fame. The social media app would loop six-second clips. Vine was shut down in 2017. Now, it's getting a reboot thanks in part to Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey. A new app called diVine will give users access to more than 100,000 archived Vine videos."
"Now, it's getting a reboot thanks in part to Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey. Plus, you'll be able to upload and share new videos. MORE: Twitter announces it will discontinue Vine app In a unique feature to this app, diVine will flag videos that use generative AI and prevent it from being posted. Tech Crunch reports diVine's creation was financed by Dorsey's nonprofit "and Other Stuff." Copyright © 2025 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved."
Vine, the six-second looping video app, gained fame for short-form clips and was shut down in 2017. The platform is being relaunched as diVine, offering access to more than 100,000 archived Vine videos while allowing users to upload and share new content. diVine includes a built-in moderation feature that flags videos created with generative AI and blocks them from being posted. The relaunch received financial backing from Jack Dorsey's nonprofit "and Other Stuff." The app aims to preserve Vine's archive and provide a controlled environment for new short-form videos.
Read at ABC7 San Francisco
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