The age of the looping, six-second comedy video is no more. Today, the teams behind Twitter and Vine announced that they’ve decided to shut down the Vine app starting today. The Vine website will stay ...
Twitter announced this morning that its video clip platform Vine will be closed in the coming months, and on my timeline, the news was met with anger, confusion, and sadness. Vine was a platform that ...
Vine, the video-looping app from Twitter that has been providing 6-second bursts of entertainment for users since 2013, is going away. The news was announced in a blog post from the company on ...
How will Twitter squeeze more cash out of each user since it can’t seem to add more of them? A Twitter video channel. Pre-roll ads before Vines. And sharing cash to attract creators. After watching ...
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 will “discontinue” Vine, its looping six-second video app, the company announced Thursday morning. It’s a cost-saving move that coincided with Twitter laying off about nine percent of its ...
Cultural death and actual nonexistence aren’t mutually exclusive in the world of social media: It’s possible for a social network to pass from the world without actually going offline. Myspace, after ...
On 27 October 2016, video-sharing app Vine abruptly announced that its service was slated for closure: Since 2013, millions of people have turned to Vine to laugh at loops and see creativity unfold.
Twitter announced Thursday that Vine will be sent to the great cloud storage space in the sky, which is too bad. The looping six-second video format revolutionized the way fans consumed sports, from ...
On Thursday, Twitter announced it was ending Vine, the video-sharing app that had been active since 2013. Vine not only brought in a new era of creating short videos meant to watch on your phone, but ...