Elon Musk Found the Vine Archive and Says It Might Come Back

The Vine revival might be real, or it might just be AI wearing nostalgia as a disguise.

Nkeiru Ezekwere
3 Min Read

Vine is not dead. It’s just… in digital hibernation. Over the weekend, Elon Musk dropped a little nostalgia bomb on X (formerly Twitter): the original Vine archive has been found, and yes, he says the team is working to bring user access back. That means your favorite six-second videos might see the light of day again. RIP in peace, “fre shavacado.”

Vine, if you somehow missed the golden age of internet humor, was the short-form video app that paved the way for TikTok could run. Twitter bought it back in 2012 for $30 million, but instead of building on its popularity, the platform kind of let it rot. By 2016, uploads were frozen. In 2017, Vine was officially shuttered. But its legacy, and its memes, never really left.

And apparently, neither did its data.

Related: X Experiments with Community Notes to Highlight Well-Liked Posts

Musk, who has been toying with the idea of reviving Vine ever since he bought Twitter in 2022, has not committed to a full reboot just yet. But he did say the archive was intact and the team is “working on making it accessible again.” Whether that means you will get to repost your iconic “road work ahead” moment or just scroll through old content is still unclear.

Here is where it gets murky (or Musk-y): in the same post, he also hyped up Grok’s new AI tool, Grok Imagine, which lets Premium+ subscribers create videos using AI prompts. He called it “AI Vine”, suggesting that instead of resurrecting the old platform with its original creator energy, Musk’s new vision for bite-sized video might involve machine-generated clips instead.

So, are we getting the Vine revival fans have been begging for since 2016, or is this all a smokescreen for promoting Grok?

We have seen Musk float shiny ideas before that never fully materialize, and this might just be another. But if he does follow through, one thing is for sure: the internet is more than ready for a Vine revival, AI-powered or not. Is Elon reviving Vine for the culture… or is it just another Musk moment designed to hype up his AI agenda?

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