- Divine aims to revive spontaneous six-second videos without AI-generated content.
- Upon launch announcement, 10,000 users quickly joined the iOS beta test.
- Divine includes 170,000 archived Vine videos to complement new user-generated content.
âRoad work ahead? I sure hope it does.â
âLook at all those chickens.â
âAh, I couldâve dropped my croissant.â
Those three lines can pull a millennial or Gen Z adult straight back to the nostalgia of at-home sketches, chaotic impressions and six-second masterpieces.
Now, those moments are returning in a new app called Divine, a decentralized reboot of Vine that aims to revive human-made, spontaneous video in a social media world increasingly shaped by AI.
On Thursday, Evan Henshaw-Path, Divineâs developer, posted on X that the appâs iOS beta test hit its 10,000-user cap within four hours. Once the app is approved for the public, it will be available on both iOS and Android at divine.video.
According to the appâs website, Divine is âsocial media by humans, for humans,â built deliberately to restore the âcreative, funny, weird and wonderfully humanâ authenticity that defined the original platform from 2013 to 2017.
ââDo it for the Vineâ wasnât just a meme,â Divineâs website writes. âIt was a celebration of authentic human expression.â
TechCrunch reported that the project has launched with backing from Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey through his nonprofit âand Other Stuff,â which funds experimental open-source projects aimed at reshaping the social web.
âWhat are those? â¦â 170,000 archived videos
The idea began, according to Divineâs website, during interviews for the Revolution.Social podcast, when guests Yoel Roth and Taylor Lorenz expressed how much the internet had lost when Vine disappeared.
That nostalgia sparked a question: If Vine mattered so deeply to online culture, why not bring it back â this time using decentralized technology that corporations canât control?
To rebuild it, Divine turned to the work of Archive Team, a volunteer group that rescued much of Vineâs content before the shutdown. Divine has now imported those preserved clips from the Internet Archive, giving âauthentic pre-AI era videos a new home on the decentralized web,â according to the projectâs site.
The app currently includes roughly 170,000 preserved videos â each labeled with a special archive badge and automatically tagged âHuman-Made,â since they were created long before todayâs AI video generative tools.
It has also restored 62,000 accounts, which users will be able to claim and receive login credentials for, if they can prove the account was theirs.
âRoad work ahead? I sure hope it â¦â isnât AI
Divine mirrors Vineâs original structure:
- Six-second maximum video length
- Automatic looping
- MP4 format
It includes feeds such as home, discovery, trending and hashtag-based browsing, and it allows users to create curated lists â something only employees could do on the original Vine. Now, anyone can build themed collections, playlists or âeditorâs choiceâ-style groupings for oneâs own niche or community.
The app describes its mission as a counterbalance to what it calls the rise of âAI slopâ â synthetic videos flooding platforms like TikTok, YouTube and Instagram. Forbes reports that 71% of images on social media are AI-generated.
The app uses âhuman-madeâ badges that users can receive on videos to ensure something is not AI-generated. To verify, Divine uses:
- ProofMode, a cryptographic verification system that uses hardware attestation to prove a video was captured by a real device.
- Machine-learning analysis to spot suspected AI-generated content.
- Community reporting, using Nostrâs decentralized moderation standards.
âHey, Iâm sorry I didnât see you there. I was too busy blocking out the â¦â illegal content
Despite being decentralized, Divine enforces strict boundaries on the servers it operates. The platform maintains a âzero-tolerance policyâ for child sexual abuse material, illegal content, harassment, hate speech, nonconsensual imagery and spam, according to its safety standards.
Content is filtered with AI detection tools and human review, and Divine pledges to respond to reports within 24 hours â with immediate action on illegal content.
âHey, I want to be famousâ â creators to make money
Divine also aims to fix one of Vineâs core problems: It didnât pay its creators. It offers a few ways to fund popular influencers and commits to not take a large cut of earnings. Creators will eventually be able to make money through these channels:
- Viewers can tip creators directly.
- Instant, low-fee payments using Bitcoinâs Lightning Network.
- Privacy-preserving payments using Cashu e-cash.
- Subscriber-only content features.
âFree shavacadoâ and decentralized social media
Unlike the first Vine â which shut down after Twitter, which owned the platform, made a corporate decision to kill the app in 2017 â Divine is designed so no company can take it offline again.
Its website emphasizes that itâs an independent project with âno affiliation to X (formerly Twitter) or the original Vine platform.â Instead, it uses Nostr â a decentralized, open protocol that distributes content across many independent relays rather than one companyâs servers.
In a statement provided to TechCrunch, Dorsey said that Nostr enables developers to build networks âwithout the need for VC-backing, toxic business models or huge teams of engineers,â and that he funded Divine specifically to show whatâs possible when social platforms canât be shut down by a corporate owner.
The app is fully open source, with both its iOS/Flutter app and web client available on GitHub.
