LOS ANGELES — Vine's death, however inevitable it seemed, upset many digital influencers. After all, earlier this week CBS's 60 Minutes featured "the influencers" aka some of the platform's biggest ...
Today, Twitter announced that they are sending Vine - the six-second, looping videos that made so many people famous and so many things viral - into hospice care. The social media service that helped ...
In a blog post Thursday morning, the six-second-video platform Vine surprised many by announcing it will be closing its doors in the coming months. While it's never been at the top of anyone's ...
It’s a sad time for anyone who loves Vine’s quirky six-second videos. I know that I’ve spent way too much time staring at a lot of the beautifully-crafted short videos, and now that era is coming to ...
Inaugurating a very black moment, Vine began much like any other social network, and not until its demise was it realized what would be missed. Founded in 2012 by a trio of entrepreneurs—a word often, ...
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 ...
A blog posted Thursday revealed that Vine, which was launched in 2013, will no longer be available on the app in coming months. The Vine website will remain, so users can access and download vines.
It’s been a rough morning for Twitter. Shortly after the ubiquitous, essential, yet still somehow struggling communication platform announced that it would be laying off 9% of its workforce, the axe ...
Short-form video creators everywhere were dumbstruck at the end of October when Twitter announced it was killing Vine. There’s still no word on when Vine might see its final day, and there are rumors ...
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