Twitter Inc announced Thursday that it would discontinue the
video-sharing mobile app Vine, as it moves to cut 9 percent of its
workforce worldwide to keep costs down after beating Wall Street
quarterly earnings expectations.
The decision comes on the heels
of a failed attempt to sell Twitter as it fights against stagnant user
growth and mounting competition from other social media platforms.
In
a post published jointly by Twitter and Vine to the blog platform
Medium, the social media services said that the Vine website would stay
live even after the mobile app is discontinued, giving users the chance
to download and save any videos.
A Twitter spokeswoman told Reuters the app will shutter in coming months but did not specify a date.
Twitter
introduced the video sharing application in January 2013 as a way for
users to share small snippets of video that were six seconds or less.
The service was popular with members of the microblogging site and
spawned several so-called “Vine stars,” attracting millions of
followers.
Social media users reeled over the news and Vine
quickly became the top-trending topic on Twitter in the U.S. with over
1.64 million tweets.
“RIP VINE #GoneTooSoon,” tweeted Patricia Laire (@patricialaire).
“VINE IS A QUARTER OF MY LIFE I’M SO UPSET,” wrote Twitter user moon (@hrtbreaker_mp3).
Others, however, saw the news as inevitable.
“We all knew Vine was not forever,” tweeted Tyzano (@Tyzano). “It just could not compete with other platforms.”
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Thursday, October 27, 2016
Twitter To Shutdown Its Video-Sharing App Vine.
Twitter To Shutdown Its Video-Sharing App Vine.
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Twitter Inc announced Thursday that it would discontinue the video-sharing mobile app Vine, as it moves to cut 9 percent of its work...
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