Why does no one talk about Vine anymore? Explore why the $30M app shut down, its rise, stars, and whether you can access it today.
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In October 2016, Vine's parent company Twitter shut down the video-sharing app. Its already existing videos stayed online, but avid users of the six-second video app were no longer able to create and ...
Vine will reportedly live on, at least in some form or another, according to a press release from the company. An announcement posted today on Vine's Medium page announced they've "been working ...
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. After announcing its ...
Twitter's October announcement that it would be shutting down its popular Vine feature drew criticism from across the internet -- and apparently that collective outrage worked. The company published a ...
It’s the end of an era. Twitter today announced it is planning on killing off Vine “in the coming months,” after launching the service back in January of 2013. For its part, Twitter had been rumored ...
Vine, the service, may be shuttered soon, but Vine, the app, will survive: Twitter is going to update the existing Vine app with a new Vine Camera app come January. “With this camera app you’ll still ...
Back in October, it was announced that Vine was shutting its doors. Now, the Twitter-owned service is backing up just a bit, announcing that instead of a total shutdown, Vine will be turned into an ...
From 2012 through 2016, Vine was one of the hottest social media platforms under the sun, hosting more than 40 million short videos from more than 200 million users before Twitter decided to ...