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Reading: After shutting down Vine in 2017, former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey invests in a reboot of the app with greater than 10,000 archived six-second movies
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After shutting down Vine in 2017, former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey invests in a reboot of the app with greater than 10,000 archived six-second movies
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After shutting down Vine in 2017, former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey invests in a reboot of the app with greater than 10,000 archived six-second movies

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Last updated: November 13, 2025 5:03 pm
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Published: November 13, 2025
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When Twitter, now X, shut down Vine in 2017, customers thought its six-second movies had been gone ceaselessly—however now, the previous CEO who shuttered the app helps convey them again.

Jack Dorsey, the previous Twitter chief and now CEO (or Blockhead) at funds firm Block, is supporting a Vine reboot app known as diVine that plans to convey again 10,000 archived movies from the defunct platform as soon as thought misplaced to the world. The brand new app, which is being funded by Dorsey’s nonprofit “and Different Stuff,” may also take a powerful stance in opposition to the AI-generated content material that has began to proliferate throughout the online, with particular filters to stop AI posts.

The Vine reboot effort may beat Elon Musk to the punch. The world’s richest man and X proprietor stated in August the corporate was engaged on opening person entry to the archive of Vine movies that it has, which was as soon as regarded as deleted—though it’s unclear if Musk’s declare will quantity to something.

X didn’t instantly reply to Fortune’s request for remark.

diVine is being spearheaded by Evan Henshaw-Plath, additionally identified by his longtime on-line persona Rabble, whose relationship with Dorsey goes again to Odeo, a podcasting app from which Twitter spun out as a aspect mission. A part of the imaginative and prescient of creating the diVine app, he advised TechCrunch, was to take the tech again to the pre-AI, internet 2.0 days for the sake of nostalgia.

“So principally, I’m like, can we do one thing that’s sort of nostalgic?” he stated. “Can we do one thing that takes us again, that lets us see these previous issues, but additionally lets us see an period of social media the place you can both have management of your algorithms, or you can select who you comply with, and it’s simply your feed, and the place that it’s an actual individual that recorded the video?”

By means of a few months of analysis and coding, Henshaw-Plath was in a position to extract a “good share” of the most well-liked Vine movies and their related person accounts by digging via an archive made on the time of its shutdown by an archiving group appropriately known as the Archive Crew, which goals to protect web sites vulnerable to disappearing. 

Earlier Vine customers who see their movies revived can even declare their previous accounts by proving they nonetheless have entry to the social media accounts listed of their lifeless Vine profiles. They’ll additionally request they be taken down.

The rebooted app is being hosted by an open-source decentralized protocol backed by Dorsey known as Nostr, which he stated places diVine above the necessity for enterprise capitalists, poisonous enterprise fashions, or massive engineering groups. This time, Vine’s movies won’t be misplaced to historical past, he added.

“The explanation I funded the non-profit, and Different Stuff, is to permit artistic engineers like Rabble to indicate what’s potential on this new world, by utilizing permissionless protocols which might’t be shut down primarily based on the whim of a company proprietor,” Dorsey stated in an announcement to TechCrunch. 

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