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I don't understand.. I don't see this project on chorus or anything linked from the site.. where is the: "Accountability Measures Tiered governance structure with pillar leads forming the board that oversees major decisions Transparent reporting of fund allocation and project progress Regular community updates on achievements and challenges Peer accountability among pillar leads" -andotherstuff.org Sounds cool, is it this universes thing or where is everyone?
Amazing! After I got the TS test address for DiVin from rabble , I was still wondering how there could be so many videos with likes. β€œTo build diVine, Evan Henshaw-Plath, an early Twitter employee and member of β€œand Other Stuff,” explored the Vine archive. After Twitter announced it was shutting down the short video app in 2016, its videos were backed up by a group called the Archive Team. This community archiving project is not affiliated with Archive.org but is rather a collective that works together to save internet websites that are in danger of being lost.” image
Had to remind myself what Vine was again: Vine was an American short-form video hosting service that allowed users to create and share looping video clips up to six seconds long. It was founded in June 2012 by Rus Yusupov, Dom Hofmann, and Colin Kroll, and was acquired by Twitter, Inc. four months later for $30 million. The service launched its iOS app in January 2013, followed by Android and Windows versions. Vine became popular for its creative potential, enabling users to produce content using stop-motion and other innovative techniques. At its peak, it had over 200 million active users by December 2015. The Vine app allowed users to browse videos, view content by theme, and participate in trending videos. Videos could be shared on other platforms like Facebook and Twitter. In October 2016, Twitter announced it would disable uploads to Vine, allowing only viewing and downloading of existing content. The service was officially shut down on January 17, 2017, and the app was no longer available after that. On January 20, 2017, Twitter launched an online archive of all Vine videos, which was later shut down in April 2019.