After almost nine years offline, the short-form video-sharing app Vine is relaunching — sort of. The founder of Twitter, Jack Dorsey, and one of Twitter’s earliest employees, Evan Henshaw-Plath (known ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. On Version History: the messy, all too short beginning of the vertical video revolution. On Version History: the ...
Corin Cesaric is a Flex Editor at CNET. She received her bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Missouri-Columbia. Before joining CNET, she covered crime at People Magazine and ...
There might finally be a reboot many people can get behind — but it’s not coming from Hollywood. Evan Henshaw-Plath, one of Twitter’s original employees, is bringing back the beloved video-sharing app ...
Jack Dorsey is back with another social media platform, but this time, he is not a founder, but a backer through his nonprofit "and Other Stuff," according to Engadget. The new platform, dubbed Divine ...
Nearly a decade after going offline, Vine is (sort of) back and, in a truly bizarre twist, Jack Dorsey is at least partially responsible. An early Twitter employee has released a beta version of a ...
Jack Dorsey's latest social media experiment is launching with a promise: no AI slop. Backed by the former Twitter (now X) CEO and co-founder, the reboot of Vine—called diVine—will allow users to ...
Old Vine logo and Jack Dorsey, the creator and cofounder of Twitter. (Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photos: Vine, Joe Raedle/Getty Images) Vine is coming back — sort of. Former Twitter CEO Jack ...
In a nutshell: Vine was officially retired in 2017, when Twitter decided to shut down the video-sharing network for good. Several attempts to revive the six-second video craze followed, but they all ...
After getting shut down in 2017, Vine is back! Now called diVine, the app was funded by former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey. Former Twitter employee Evan Henshaw-Plath, known online as Rabble, has been ...
Vine is officially getting a second life. The beloved short-form video platform, shut down in 2017 before TikTok dominated the format, is returning under the name diVine, backed by Twitter co-founder ...
Evan Henshaw-Plath launched diVine to revive the spirit of Vine and fight internet decline. The app, supported by Jack Dorsey's nonprofit, aims to counter AI-generated content online. Rabble and ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results