Elon Musk, owner of X (formerly Twitter), announced that the company has discovered and is working to restore the video archive for Vine, a popular short-form video application, sparking excitement among its nostalgic user base.
Vine, known for its six-second looping videos, was acquired by Twitter in October 2012 for $30 million, with the goal of expanding the social media platform’s video capabilities. However, the app’s potential was not fully realized, leading to its shutdown in 2016 by restricting new uploads, and was fully discontinued by 2017. Although the app is no longer available, a user archive remained accessible for a period after its discontinuation.
Despite its discontinuation and absence from app stores, Vine continues to hold a significant place in internet culture, with its content living on through online compilations on platforms like YouTube and through the careers of creators who began on the platform, reaching new generations.
Musk had previously shown interest in reviving Vine after acquiring Twitter in October 2022, conducting a poll asking, “Bring back Vine?”, to which nearly 70% of respondents voted “yes.” At the time, Axios reported that Twitter had even assigned engineers to a Vine reboot project, although it never materialized.
While the immediate focus is on restoring the archive, Musk’s broader ambitions for video creation appear to be shifting. In the same announcement about Vine, he highlighted Grok’s new video-creation feature, Grok Imagine, available to X Premium+ subscribers, calling it “AI Vine.” This suggests a potential pivot towards AI-generated content rather than human-made videos.
The actual delivery of this promise to restore the Vine archive remains to be seen, with some observers suggesting the announcement could also serve as a strategy to draw attention to Grok AI, rather than indicating a concrete effort within the company to make old Vines available for reposting.




