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Good or bad, it seems like the Vine video archive could resurface in the future, if Elon Musk's word is anything to go by.In ...
Elon Musk recently announced that he's bringing back the Vine archives, after teasing the return of the social platform over ...
For quite some time now, Elon Musk has been promising to bring back Vine. Back in the day, the short-lived TikTok precursor ...
When Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese were coming out of school, hip-hop legend and BIG3 founder Ice Cube extended a $5 million ...
The Vine app was launched in 2012 as the video sharing social network where users could share six-second, looping videos. Shortly after it was founded, Vine was bought by Twitter and has grown to ...
Twitter is shutting down its Vine video service: The company will discontinue the Vine mobile app in the coming months, it announced in a blog post Thursday. The Vine website will stay up and ...
Twitter is pulling the plug on its six-second video platform Vine. Hours after announcing layoffs of 9% of its staff, aimed at cutting costs and getting the company closer to profitability ...
Twitter has to make a lot of tough decisions—this is surely one of them. It's a dog-eat-dog world out there, I just hope all the great folks at Vine are taken care of.
Vine is dying — but slowly. The looping-video app will be shut down “in the coming months” as the app’s struggling owner Twitter slashes costs in search of profits.
Vine may survive after all. Twitter is currently vetting multiple term sheets from companies offering to buy Vine, and hopes to make a deal soon, multiple sources tell TechCrunch.
Vine was acquired by Twitter in 2012, just before it launched in 2013 as a video app where users could upload short clips lasting up to 6 seconds. Last year, Twitter announced it would shut down Vine.