Is Vine about to be resurrected?
The six-second video app was officially killed off by its parent company, Twitter, earlier this year. But if tweets by Dom Hofmann, the app's founder, are any indication, a follow-up to the platform is in the works.
On Wednesday, Hofmann tweeted a cryptic image simply bearing the characters "V2" in the signature shade of Vine green.
— dom hofmann (@dhof) December 6, 2017
Hofmann's image comes about a week after a string of tweets in which he discussed working on a follow-up to VIne.
i'm going to work on a follow-up to vine. i've been feeling it myself for some time and have seen a lot of tweets, dms, etc.
— dom hofmann (@dhof) November 30, 2017
i'm funding it myself as an outside project, so it doesn't interfere with the (quite exciting) work we're doing at the company, which is my first priority
— dom hofmann (@dhof) November 30, 2017
nothing else to share yet, but more as it develops
— dom hofmann (@dhof) November 30, 2017
Hofmann has not yet commented on the V2 project, so it's not clear how the platform will compare to Vine.
According to The Verge, Hofmann is currently working on another project called Interspace, but is funding V2 independently.
Vine was launched in 2013 as a short video platform that worked in conjunction with Twitter. Though the platform produced hundreds of viral videos and launched the careers of some young actors and comedians, Twitter struggled to monetize the product.
Currently, the app exists only as Vine Camera — a feature that allows users to take looping six-second videos. Videos previously hosted on the platform can only be viewed online at Vine.co.
Alex Hider is a writer for the E.W. Scripps National Desk. Follow him on Twitter @alexhider.