Bitget App
Trade smarter
Buy cryptoMarketsTradeFuturesEarnSquareMore
Jack Dorsey backs diVine, a new version of Vine that features Vine’s original video library

Jack Dorsey backs diVine, a new version of Vine that features Vine’s original video library

Bitget-RWA2025/11/13 09:21
By:Bitget-RWA

With generative AI content increasingly populating our social platforms, a new initiative to revive Vine’s iconic six-second looping videos is launching, supported by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey. On Thursday, an app named diVine will debut, offering access to over 100,000 Vine clips that have been recovered from a backup created before Vine was discontinued.

This app isn’t just a nostalgic archive; users will be able to set up profiles and upload fresh Vine-style videos. Unlike most social networks, where AI-generated content is often poorly marked, diVine will actively detect and block suspected AI-generated videos from being uploaded.

Jack Dorsey backs diVine, a new version of Vine that features Vine’s original video library image 0 Image Credits:diVine

Funding for diVine came from Jack Dorsey’s nonprofit “and Other Stuff,” which was established in May 2025. This organization aims to support innovative open source projects and tools that could reshape the social media environment.

To create diVine, Evan Henshaw-Plath, an early Twitter team member and part of “and Other Stuff,” delved into the Vine archives. After Twitter revealed plans to close Vine in 2016, a group known as the Archive Team backed up the videos. This volunteer effort, separate from Archive.org, is dedicated to preserving at-risk websites across the internet.

However, the Archive Team had stored Vine’s data in massive binary files of 40-50 GB each, making it impractical for casual viewing. Discovering this archive inspired Henshaw-Plath (also known as Rabble) to attempt extracting the old Vine videos to form the foundation of a new mobile app reminiscent of Vine.

Jack Dorsey backs diVine, a new version of Vine that features Vine’s original video library image 1 Image Credits:diVine

“So basically, I wondered, can we create something that taps into nostalgia?” he shared with TechCrunch. “Can we build something that lets us revisit those old moments, but also experience a time in social media where you could control your feed, choose who to follow, and be sure the videos were made by real people?”

Rabble spent several months developing data scripts and deciphering the file formats, eventually reconstructing the videos along with user data and engagement metrics such as views and a portion of the original comments.

“I couldn’t recover everything, but I managed to extract a significant amount and essentially rebuild these Vines and their creators, assigning each a new profile on this open network,” he explained.

According to Rabble, the app features a “substantial portion” of the most well-known Vine videos, though many less popular clips are missing. For example, he noted that millions of K-pop-related videos were never archived at all.

Jack Dorsey backs diVine, a new version of Vine that features Vine’s original video library image 2 Image Credits:diVine

“We currently have between 150,000 and 200,000 videos from around 60,000 creators,” he said, pointing out that Vine originally boasted millions of users and creators.

Vine creators retain the rights to their content and can request removal from diVine via a DMCA takedown, or prove account ownership by showing access to the social accounts linked in their Vine bios. (This isn’t an automated process, so there may be delays if many creators make requests at once.)

Once their accounts are restored, creators can upload new videos or add any old content that wasn’t recovered during the restoration.

To confirm that new uploads are genuinely made by humans, Rabble is leveraging technology from the Guardian Project, a human rights nonprofit, which verifies that videos were actually recorded on a smartphone, among other verification methods.

Jack Dorsey backs diVine, a new version of Vine that features Vine’s original video library image 3 Image Credits:diVine

Additionally, since diVine is built on Nostr—a decentralized, open source protocol favored by Dorsey—developers are free to create their own applications and operate their own servers, relays, and media hosts.

“Nostr, the open source protocol powering diVine, enables developers to build a new wave of apps without relying on venture capital, problematic business models, or massive engineering teams,” Jack Dorsey stated. “I created the nonprofit, and Other Stuff, to empower inventive engineers like Rabble to demonstrate what’s possible with open protocols that can’t be shut down at the discretion of a corporation.”

Elon Musk, who now owns Twitter/X, has also pledged to revive Vine, announcing in August that the company had located the old video archive. However, nothing has been released to the public yet. In contrast, the Dorsey-supported diVine project maintains that since the videos come from an online archive and creators still hold their copyrights, their use is justified as fair use.

Jack Dorsey backs diVine, a new version of Vine that features Vine’s original video library image 4 Image Credits:diVine

Rabble also believes there’s a real appetite for a social platform that isn’t dominated by AI, even as generative AI and apps like OpenAI’s Sora and Meta AI become more widespread.

“Companies see high engagement with AI and assume that’s what people want,” Rabble said. “But they’re missing the point—yes, people interact with AI, but we also crave control over our digital lives and social interactions. There’s a longing for the early days of Web 2.0, for the blogging era, for the time when communities were built organically rather than just chasing algorithms,” he added.

DiVine can be downloaded for both iOS and Android.

0

Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.

PoolX: Earn new token airdrops
Lock your assets and earn 10%+ APR
Lock now!

You may also like

Meme Coin Surge: 312% Gains or Just a Passing Craze?

- A PEPE wallet address (0x2dc) liquidated its 2-year position, securing a $658,000 profit (312% ROI) via Binance. - The sale reflects a meme coin market resurgence, with PEPE futures open interest rising 3% to $200.53M. - Binance’s role in facilitating liquidity highlights growing institutional support for niche crypto assets. - High returns rely on patient capital and favorable conditions, raising sustainability concerns amid market volatility.

Bitget-RWA2025/11/13 11:04
Meme Coin Surge: 312% Gains or Just a Passing Craze?

Ethereum Updates Today: Is the Crypto Market’s Deleveraging Signaling an Imminent Rebound or an Extended Slump?

- Crypto markets face deleveraging with 21% drop in futures open interest, signaling potential market reset per historical patterns. - Bitcoin and Ethereum rebound post-US government shutdown, driven by renewed institutional demand and reduced policy uncertainty. - Bitcoin ETFs see $523M inflows while Ethereum ETFs face $107M outflows, contrasting with whale accumulations of $350M in ETH. - Altcoins show mixed signals: XRP rebounds but faces technical resistance, while SUI stabilizes amid declining DeFi TV

Bitget-RWA2025/11/13 11:04
Ethereum Updates Today: Is the Crypto Market’s Deleveraging Signaling an Imminent Rebound or an Extended Slump?

Trust Wallet Token (TWT) Price Rally: Shifting Market Forces and Key Alliances Influence Near-Term Outlook

- Trust Wallet Token (TWT) surged to $1.60 in October 2025 driven by strategic innovations and expanded utility within the Trust Wallet ecosystem. - Key factors include 210M+ user growth, FlexGas discounts, multi-chain gas integration, and Trust Premium loyalty programs reducing token circulation. - Strategic partnerships with Onramper enabled 130+ local payment methods across 190 countries, boosting TWT's adoption in emerging markets like Indonesia and Nigeria. - Analysts project TWT could reach $5.13 in

Bitget-RWA2025/11/13 11:02
Trust Wallet Token (TWT) Price Rally: Shifting Market Forces and Key Alliances Influence Near-Term Outlook

BFF Bank's Measured Growth Compared to Amex GBT's Rapid AI-Powered Expansion: Contrasting Strategies for Advancement

- BFF Bank's stock rose 1.29% after 33% net profit growth and €5.8B loan expansion, with plans to enter French/Luxembourg markets. - Amex GBT reported 13% revenue growth ($674M) and 9% EBITDA increase ($128M), driven by CWT acquisition and travel demand surge. - BFF improved operational efficiency (46% cost-income ratio) while Amex raised 2025 guidance to $523M-$533M EBITDA and 12% revenue growth. - Divergent strategies emerged: BFF focused on organic expansion and risk management versus Amex's AI-driven t

Bitget-RWA2025/11/13 10:28
BFF Bank's Measured Growth Compared to Amex GBT's Rapid AI-Powered Expansion: Contrasting Strategies for Advancement