Vine reboot, diVine, is out now to save us from AI slop
The app hosts 500,000 original Vine videos and requires new posts to be human-made through in-app recording or verification.
3 Articles
3 Articles
Vine is coming back, and it’s being relaunched by the guy who killed it — say hello to Jack Dorsey’s Divine, a TikTok and Instagram Stories rival with a ferocious ambition to end AI slop
Jack Dorsey is relaunching Vine as Divine nearly 10 years after he killed it.
Vine reboot, diVine, is out now to save us from AI slop
Vine is back. Sort of. Which is a strange sentence to say in 2026. Almost a decade after the popular short-form video app had its doors shuttered by former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, it has been relaunched as Divine, funded by the very same man who killed it.Divine serves as both a new host for Vine's famous six-second videos and an archive of 500,000 videos from OG Vine, which are also hosted on the app. Additionally, one of the stated mission go…
Jack Dorsey has done his own again. No, he is not resuscitating Twitter or selling NFT from the first tweet — that was already the previous chapter. This time he is betting on Divine, a social network of videos where artificial intelligence is totally forbidden. In the 2026s, when even the time app suggests editing clouds with automatic Photoshop, Dorsey raises an analog trench with flavor to 2013. The premise is simple: only human-recorded cont…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

