Twitter itself will take Vine’s place as a social network for short videos. To prep for tomorrow’s Vine shutdown and rebirth as Vine Camera, Twitter now automatically loops all videos shorter than 6.5 seconds. That’s not just clips posted from Vine Camera, but any tiny video, including ones saved from other apps like Snapchat.
Twitter confirms to me that looping started rolling out last week. It had noted in an FAQ that this change would come some time in January. TechCrunch reader @IamCornelias first pointed out the change to us.
Here’s an example of a short video, apparently saved from Snapchat, that now loops on Twitter:
Though Vine was said to shut down today, it has received a short stay of execution. Twitter is giving users one final chance to download their videos, with the switch-over happening tomorrow. We reported that Twitter explored the possibility of selling Vine, and received several bids, but it seems it has decided there were too many risks and not enough benefits to giving another company control.
Even without Vine, Twitter still has a chance to be a hub for quick videos. The platform’s real-time nature and largely unsorted feed make it a natural place for clips you wouldn’t necessarily want to navigate to a full YouTube page to watch (with possible pre-rolls ads) and that might not survive well on Facebook’s algorithmically curated News Feed.
Making Vines and other sub-6.5-second videos loop correctly could also provide an alternative place for them beyond Instagram, where many creators said they’d be sharing after Vine went away.
Looping was at the core of some of Vine’s best art and comedy. It unlocked the potential for swirling, near-psychedelic content where it wasn’t clear when a clip started or ended. And the sudden cut-off and restart set up comedic timing, so punch lines and surprise endings hit hard and disappeared instead of lingering and fading out.
If this looping format is Vine’s legacy, at least it will live on in a Twitter product and not just the competitors it inspired.