RIP Vine: Why is Twitter dumping video sharing app?

If you wanted further proof that Twitter (Frankfurt: A1W6XZ - news) is getting down to the grim and boring business of running a profitable company, killing Vine is it.

The social media company already got rid of 9% of its workforce, and Vine was next in its sights.

The video sharing service lasted only four years, but still created a whole new medium, with whole new genres within it.

The platform - six-second looping videos - gave rise to a fresh generation of comedy stars in particular.

:: What are the most watched Vines?

Crucially, many of those probably would not have found a place in more traditional media. (Sure, that included Dapper Laughs, but you take the good with the rough.)

Vine had a real and interesting culture - rare in an increasingly homogenised internet.

So why kill it? Well, Twitter has promised to be profitable in 2017. Axing a product and team allows Twitter to focus on its core product.

:: Twitter job cuts: Nearly one in 10 roles to go worldwide

And Vine was well loved, but not massively widely used. Since Instagram launched video, it has lost ground. Snapchat's stories format has not helped, either.

Twitter is also ramping up its own video and live streaming efforts, and Vine might have distracted its users from that.

Still, it is painful when a great product you like gets binned, while rubbish ones (like Twitter Moments) live on.

I still have painful memories of Google Reader being killed while Google Plus was allowed to live.

Silicon Valley is ruthlessly focused on the numbers; it has little time for taste. RIP.