Vine Reboot Divine Launches Publicly on iOS and Android — 500,000 Restored Videos and a Hard Ban on AI Slop (April 29, 2026)
Jack Dorsey-backed Vine reboot Divine launched on the App Store and Google Play on April 29, 2026, with 500,000 archived videos, six-second posting tools and a cryptographic ban on AI-generated content. The decentralized app runs on the Nostr protocol.
Divine, the Jack Dorsey-funded reboot of Vine, exited beta on and is now publicly available on the Apple App Store and Google Play. The app ships with an archive of roughly 500,000 restored Vines, native posting of six-second looping videos, a Nostr-based decentralized backend and an explicit, cryptographically enforced ban on AI-generated content.
What Happened
Divine's public launch caps a 17-month build-out by the team at and Other Stuff, the nonprofit Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey set up in May 2025 to fund experimental open-source social projects. The project was first announced on and ran an invite-only iOS beta that drew about 10,000 users before opening to everyone this week.
According to TechCrunch, Divine restored its archive from a backup of the original Vine service that Twitter shut down in 2017, and is now letting any user post new six-second clips alongside the legacy library. The team confirmed to Engadget that the rollout is global day one, with new feeds, hashtag-driven autoplay compilations and creator profiles built around the original Vine ID system.
Key Details
- 500,000 archived Vines restored — sourced from an unofficial backup of the original Vine service shut down in 2017.
- Six-second clip posting — recorded directly in the Divine app or uploaded with C2PA-verified provenance.
- Nostr protocol backend — content is distributed across independent relays, not centralized Divine servers; the team is also experimenting with the AT Protocol that powers Bluesky.
- Anti-AI verification — Divine uses ProofMode for hardware attestation, ML-based AI-generated content detection, and Nostr-native community reporting. Each clip is labelled human-made or unverified.
- Original creators on board — Lele Pons, JimmyHere, MightyDuck and Jack and Jack are among returning Vine creators publicly committing to post new content.
- No algorithmic feed — Divine's product page specifically positions the app for "creativity and constraint over engagement for an ad algorithm."
What Users and Developers Are Saying
Reaction skews curious-positive but cautious. On X, returning Vine fans celebrated the archive restoration and the C2PA-based AI guardrails — a notable contrast to TikTok's flood of AI Sora clips. Rolling Stone framed Divine as the first major platform to make AI exclusion a product feature rather than a moderation afterthought. Skeptics, including coverage in Gizmodo, noted that the Nostr ecosystem is still small relative to Bluesky or Threads and that decentralized moderation has historically struggled with scale. Developers in the Nostr community welcomed Divine as the highest-profile consumer app on the protocol to date.
What This Means for Creators and Developers
For creators, Divine offers a small but loyal audience of nostalgia users plus the original Vine handle reservation system — a pull factor short-form veterans rarely get from new platforms. For developers, Divine is the largest real-world test of Nostr at consumer scale: any team building Nostr clients, relays or moderation tooling now has a six-second-video case study with measurable load. The C2PA + ProofMode stack is also notable for anyone working on AI-content provenance — Divine is effectively shipping the first mainstream consumer app where signed, attested capture is the default.
What's Next
The team has flagged AT Protocol experimentation, broader region rollouts, and an SDK for third-party Nostr clients to interoperate with the Divine archive. Funding from Dorsey's and Other Stuff nonprofit is open-ended, and the project remains 100% donor-funded with no advertising or premium tier announced for 2026. For developers, the Nostr relay implementations and the ProofMode integration are open-source and available on GitHub.
Sources
- TechCrunch — Jack Dorsey-backed Vine reboot Divine launches to the public — primary launch coverage with creator and feature details.
- 9to5Mac — App Store availability and iOS-specific feature notes.
- Engadget — Vine reboot app Divine arrives with a ban on AI slop — deeper look at the AI-content moderation stack.
- Gizmodo — context on Dorsey vs Musk Vine ambitions and skeptical analysis.
- Rolling Stone — culture take on Divine's anti-AI positioning.
- Divine official site — primary product source.
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