Skip to main content

Twitter cuts the cord on Vine video platform, discontinues support of app

Vine Windows Phone App
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Vine, Twitter’s video platform that helped popularize the short-form video standard that continued with the likes of Instagram and Snapchat, is dead. While viewers will be able to continue watching already published content, Twitter is abandoning the app and discontinuing the entire platform.

Originally founded in mid-2012, Twitter acquired the young startup for a reported $30 million, even though it had not launched. This proved to be a smart move, as after its debut in October that same year, Vine blew up, eventually garnering around 200 million monthly viewers and users.

The short-form videos proved to be a perfect breeding ground for brief comedy sketches, pranks, and win/fails, leading to a few legitimate career prospects for some of its most creative and popular users. In recent months though, some content creators have moved on to other platforms for various reasons and it seems Twitter was not willing or able to turn the ship around.

“To all the creators out there — thank you for taking a chance on this app back in the day. To the many team members over the years who made this what it was — thank you for your contributions. And of course, thank you to all of those who came to watch and laugh every day,” Twitter said in its announcement post.

This comes just a few hours after Twitter announced its quarterly financial report and things are not going well. With nine percent of its workforce set to be let go, perhaps there will be some crossover with Vine employees.

Moving forward, it is not clear what Twitter plans to do with existing content or offer content creators who will now be looking elsewhere for their recording platform. For now, all existing content will remain, including the Vine website, with Twitter promising to update everyone in the near future.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
Twitter ‘melts’ as it becomes first social app to launch a presidential bid
A stylized composite of the Twitter logo.

Elon Musk’s plan to make Twitter the first social media platform to host the launch of a U.S. presidential bid didn’t get off to the best start.

The idea was to launch a Twitter Spaces session with Republican hopeful Ron DeSantis at a scheduled time on Wednesday evening, but when the event was supposed to start, the online audience waiting patiently in the audio-only Space was met with a sudden screeching sound.

Read more
Forget Twitter — this social media app has ChatGPT built-in
Koo app store listing

Koo, a social media app developed in India that pushes itself as a Twitter replacement, is deploying ChatGPT smarts to prop its appeal. The company says Koo is the “first microblogging platform in the world” to integrate ChatGPT to boost the creative flow. Koo follows in the footsteps of Snapchat in deploying ChatGPT for some cutting-edge AI bragging rights.
At the moment, the ChatGPT integration is only available to creators with a sizeable following or those with a verified badge. However, it will soon be available for everyone without any follower count restriction. So far, the company hasn’t said anything about charging users for the feature, or whether it might be moved to a premium tier in the near future, considering the fact that OpenAI’s viral tool is embracing the API route for commercial usage.

Aside from text prompts, Koo users can also use the voice dictation feature to interact with the AI. The draft section of Koo app will let users accomplish tasks like “finding the top news of the day or asking for a quote from a well-known personality or even asking for the post or a blog to be written.” The latter is worrisome, which I’ve briefly discussed below. There's also some precedent for that out there with apps like Paragraph AI doing everything from generating content in various styles to taking over even your messaging app conversations.
Koo is pushing itself as a Twitter alternative and says it has accumulated over 50 million downloads ... but hasn’t disclosed the number of users. However, it looks like the Koo is trying to boost its appeal by recruiting the hottest new tool on the internet, one that will also be immensely convenient to churn out human-like thoughtful content in bulk — which is again the easy route to grabbing more eyeballs.

Read more
Twitter finally confirms it’s behind outage of third-party Twitter apps
A stylized composite of the Twitter logo.

Twitter has finally confirmed what everyone pretty much already knew -- that it’s behind the outage of popular third-party Twitter clients such as Tweetbot and Twitterrific.

In a message posted on its Twitter Dev account for developers, the company said: “Twitter is enforcing its long-standing API rules. That may result in some apps not working.” But it declined to offer any details about what API rules the developers of the third-party apps have violated.

Read more