Vine, as we know it, is over. Twitter announced on Thursday that it will shut down the Vine mobile app in the coming months. "Since 2013, millions of people have turned to Vine to laugh at loops and ...
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 ...
Elon Musk is in the process of reviving Vine after assigning Twitter engineers to work on a reboot of the app that Twitter shut down in 2016, according to Axios. The new Twitter boss instructed ...
Almost two months after it was revealed that the Vine app would be “discontinued,” Twitter has announced it will not be shelving the six-second video app entirely. Instead, Vine will get a second life ...
"The app came at a crucial time in my creative life," 'Billions' co-creator Brian Koppelman tweeted after the announcement was made Thursday morning. By THR Staff THR Andrew Bachelor - H 2015 4 hours ...
It’s appropriate, in a way. Vine, the six-second video app started by Twitter just three ago, will fold in the next few months, Twitter has just announced marking the end of a short life for a ...
Twitter -- parent company of what was thought to be the doomed video app -- is reportedly fielding offers from multiple suitors. As sources tell TechCrunch, a deal could come shortly. Late last month, ...
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 ...
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