Lady Gaga falling from the sky during the Super Bowl halftime show; Melania Trump swatting away her husband’s hand; the president throwing paper towels into crowds of Puerto Rico’s Hurricane Maria ...
Twitter just pulled the plug on its Vine video service: As previously announced, the company replaced Vine's iOS and Android app with a new, pared-down Vine camera app Tuesday. Vine's website will ...
As first announced back in October, Twitter is about to shut down its looping video app and social network, Vine. The company had originally implied it would pull the Vine app from the app stores, but ...
Vine as we know it is dead. Today Twitter turned off sharing, liking, commenting and revining in Vine, and released its successor, Vine Camera, as an app update on iOS and Android. It has also ...
A "follow-up" to Vine is being developed by the app's ex-CEO, Dom Hofmann. Hofmann said he's personally funding the project. Twitter acquired Vine in 2012 and killed the video app roughly one year ago ...
When Twitter, now X, shut down Vine in 2017, users thought its six-second videos were gone forever—but now, the former CEO who shuttered the app is helping bring them back. Jack Dorsey, the former ...
Late last year, Vine announced that it would be killing its mobile apps, prompting many to freak out. Rather than wither away, it was speculated that the company would be purchased continuing the ...