Vine is indeed making a kind of comeback—but not the old way. There’s no major corporate-backed relaunch of the original app. Instead, two distinct efforts are underway: Elon Musk’s AI-powered approach via X’s Grok Imagine, and a nostalgia-driven human-first reboot called diVine, backed by Jack Dorsey.
Elon Musk, CEO of X, has teased a revival of Vine—but through AI. His announcement centers on Grok Imagine, an AI text-to-video tool recently introduced on X. Musk framed this as “AI Vine,” blending nostalgia with technological novelty. He also revealed that X rediscovered the long-lost Vine video archive and plans to restore user access to it.
Despite fan excitement, experts caution that this doesn’t equate to a proper return of Vine. What’s actually happening is the introduction of AI-generated video content into X, reshaping—but not reviving—the Vine experience. The original format and platform remain absent.
Enter diVine—a heartfelt project led by former Twitter developer Evan Henshaw-Plath (aka Rabble), supported by Jack Dorsey’s nonprofit, And Other Stuff. This open-source initiative aims to resurrect the human spirit of Vine, intentionally rejecting the AI-dominated social landscape.
diVine revives original Vine videos—between 150,000 and 200,000 clips from roughly 60,000 creators sourced from an Archive Team backup. It runs on Nostr, a decentralized protocol promoting freedom and user control. AI-generated content is blocked using Guardian Project’s Proofmode tech to ensure authenticity. Creators can reclaim their profiles, remove old Vines, or upload new ones.
This platform is built as a protest against “AI slop” and the algorithmic homogenization of content. Rabble emphasizes a return to raw, user-driven creativity—where social media felt more like a community than an algorithmic game.
“We’re creating a space where human creativity is celebrated… made by a real person with a real camera, not generated by an algorithm.”
| Feature | Musk’s “AI Vine” (Grok Imagine) | diVine (Dorsey-backed) |
|———————-|——————————————|———————————————|
| New Video Creation | AI-generated via text prompts | Human-created, filmed in six-second loops |
| Archive Access | Planned restoration of Vine content | Archive is live within the diVine platform |
| AI Involvement | Core feature | Explicitly blocked |
| Governance & Tech | Centralized via X | Decentralized via Nostr, open-source |
| Creator Control | Minimal | High (DMCA, profile recovery, uploads) |
Platforms today are flooded with AI-made content, algorithmic curations, and viral optimization. diVine offers a refreshing alternative rooted in nostalgia, imperfection, and user autonomy.
Using Nostr signals a bold step toward redistributing control—away from Big Tech toward empowered creators. The app’s architecture ensures that users can truly own their content and experiences.
diVine isn’t gunning to out-TikTok TikTok. Instead, it’s more of a cultural echo: a reminder of what short-form creativity felt like before every clip was tailor-made for virality.
So, is Vine coming back? Not exactly—but in two very different guises:
If you want six-second videos made by people, for people—with nostalgia baked in—then diVine is your closest match. If AI-generated, flash-in-the-pan short clips appeal? That would be X’s “AI Vine.”
No. There’s no official relaunch of the original platform. The closest analogue is X’s Grok Imagine tool, which is an AI spin, and diVine, a separate reboot backed by Jack Dorsey.
Yes. Elon Musk says X is restoring the Vine video archive. Meanwhile, diVine already hosts over 150,000 recovered clips for browsing and content recreation.
Absolutely. Creators can reclaim their old profiles, remove or restore videos, and upload brand-new six-second clips under diVine’s human-first ethos.
No. diVine actively blocks AI-generated videos using detection tools, ensuring content is authentic and camera-made.
Instead of chasing virality and algorithmic growth, diVine embraces simplicity, creator autonomy, and a nostalgic format with roots in internet culture.
diVine is available in beta for iOS (and possibly Android soon). There’s no full launch schedule yet, and availability may vary by region.
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