Earlier this year, Evan Henshaw-Plath began digging into the archives of Vine, the looping app for six-second videos, which Twitter shuttered in 2017. With AI-generated content clogging social feeds ...
The revamped version of Vine may be the one place to escape artificial intelligence on the internet. Evan Henshaw-Plath, one of the original developers of Twitter — who notably hired Jack Dorsey in ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Vine, the short-form video platform, is making a 2025 comeback. The new app, Divine, includes an archive of as many as 200,000 original Vine videos. Users can upload new six-second long clips as well, ...
Twitter co-founder and blockchain evangelist Jack Dorsey has made good on his promise of reviving his much-missed, six-second video platform Vine — well, sort of. But the reboot has a hidden ace up ...
The formerly popular Vine platform has been away for a long time, but former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is funding a successor that has launched this week. It’s called Divine, and it is available in beta ...
In a logical conclusion of our brainrot times, the preppy clothing retailer Vineyard Vines recently released a children’s T-shirt printed with its whale logo and the adolescent meme phrase “6-7,” ...