It’s unclear what a long-term business plan for Byte might look like. Unlike YouTube and Instagram, the platform is mainly a place for comedy sketches and stunts. That’s not the type of content most brands are comfortable working with creators to produce, says Nord. Brands have a hard time being genuinely funny, and it’s not exactly easy for a creator to give an authentic product testimonial in six seconds.

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Beyond making money, creators will need to work with Byte’s stripped-down design. Unlike TikTok, Byte doesn’t have filters or elaborate in-app editing tools, and you can’t add music clips to videos. If you’re used to watching TikTok, the lack of pre-programmed sounds on Byte can seem, well, quiet. Bytes also often feel super short. Brevity is what made Vine unique but could limit the scope of content on Byte. A few seconds is probably not long enough to film a cooking or makeup tutorial—two genres that have flourished on TikTok.

Not every creator is dissuaded by those limitations. “We explore every platform to see if it'll be a right fit for our brand,” says Jacob Pace, the CEO of Flighthouse, a media company with more than 22 million followers on TikTok. Byte “might have a space since it's different (though shorter) than other short-form mobile social media apps.”

So far, Byte’s users have begun populating the platform with the same breed of weird humor that made Vine famous. A clip edited to make Kanye West look like he's FaceTiming with a hamster. A girl crashing into a bush while riding in a Target shopping cart. Shrek vibing to rap music. It’s hard to say anything definitive about a new platform, especially when content may be individualized, but a cursory look at Byte’s Popular section suggests many users are older than Generation Z.

Stumbling upon new creators isn’t easy, due to Byte’s limited discovery mechanisms. The home screen is essentially videos from people you choose to follow, but there are also a small number of computer-chosen clips, which are labeled “For Your Consideration.” Users can find more creators under the search tab by clicking playlists like “Your Mix,” “Popular Now,” and “Latest.” Overall, it’s harder to find new content on Byte than on TikTok, where the For You algorithm easily sucks users in.

Curiously, there are no public follower counts on Byte. To compensate for the loss, many users are self-reporting their own numbers in their bios. That could prove to be an issue in the long run, says Nord, because there isn’t a way for influencers to easily verify the size of their audiences. “Snapchat didn’t show you how many followers you had and did nothing to help you gain a following,” he says. As a result, many influencers left for Instagram Stories.

Eschewing follower numbers helps put the focus on each individual video. Users can still see exactly how many likes and comments each clip gets. Instead of displaying 17.5k when a video has roughly 17,500 views, Byte will show everyone it has 17,489 … then 17,490 … then 17,491, updating in real time. “Including this kind of specificity encourages users to focus on every single increment of that metric,” says Ben Grosser, a professor of new media at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the artist behind Demetricator, a tool that strips social media platforms of their metrics. “In other words, it's meant to keep us engaged, in an endless search for +1.”

It’s hard to say whether any of these choices will determine the culture of Byte. Vine is remembered largely as a joyous platform. But it shut down before the 2016 presidential election and didn’t suffer from the same content moderation scandals as platforms like Facebook and YouTube. That’s a hard reputation to try to live up to.

Vine is like vinyl records, says Nord: niche and mainly nostalgic. “I think it’s a similar thing where it just feels like that time has probably passed,” he says. But hey, vinyl has experienced a renaissance among younger music listeners in recent years. There’s still some hope that the six-second loop could come back, too.

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