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As Twitter runs short on human moderation, both in-house and contractors, the company would find it impossible to vet the flood of video content that a Vine revival will trigger.
Since then, Vine has been resting peacefully, but because society is hell bent on ruining once-beautiful things, it’s coming ...
Elon Musk's social media company X is bringing back popular video-sharing platform Vine in "AI form", the billionaire ...
Cheer to lovers of Vine, the now-defunct social media app is making a comeback. Or is it? Well, according to X, formerly ...
Twitter first revealed plans to kill of Vine in October. No reason was provided, but the move was announced just hours after Twitter confirmed significant job cuts in a desperate bid to be ...
Since Vine, Twitter's video-sharing service, launched on Thursday, it's been plagued by all sorts of woes. We noticed that it lacks privacy settings and abuse prevention measures, Facebook ...
Microsoft is also more advanced in negotiations. It may seem ironic that Twitter, which shuttered Vine in 2017 as part of a cost-cutting restructuring effort, is now suddenly interested in TikTok.
Sad times. Twitter today announced it is planning on killing off vine "in the coming months," after launching the service back in January of 2013.
Twitter acquired Vine, which featured six-second videos by users, for $30 million in 2012. The social media company shut down the feature four years later.
The first sign that Vine may be returning was when Musk posted a poll on Twitter asking whether the service should be brought back. As of the time of writing, yes was sitting at 69.5%.
Facebook blocked Twitter's access to the social network's in-app friend finder in mid-2010 and Twitter later killed Instagram's ability to find friends easily. (Instagram, as you may remember, is ...
Elon Musk should bring Vine back from the dead — if not the app or the brand itself, a short-form video feature like the one pioneered by Twitter ‘s long-defunct and dearly departed app. Of ...