

Hello fellow Clickstars!
Across this edition, we follow certified moments from Portugal’s ceramic heritage to Okinawa’s quiet sacred spaces and California’s street-level iconography—each one captured as-it-happened and anchored to the Click archive. These are street scenes, skylines, and small cultural details you’d normally scroll past, now preserved with provenance so the story stays intact—no filters, edits, or feed tricks required.
Settle in, and let this week’s Clicks of the Week take you through places and perspectives that feel worlds apart, yet connect instantly when the image itself is trusted.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X, Instagram and Hey.xyz or orb.club. They get a tip from Nodle for their contributions to the network, Click archive and creativity - if you want to get highlighted by the official accounts, keep on Clicking, yours might be next!
Support the network and its creators by following the official accounts, sharing, liking and commenting on the posts. Your support is crucial to the network's success!

In this week, the archive grew by 238 Clicks, totaling a staggering 71,092 certified media that got put on the chain. Week by week, contributions all over the world contribute to Nodle - the first Digital Trust Network that empowers creators and enterprises alike through their Android and iOS apps.
Where: Ílhavo, Aveiro, Portugal
Feed: General

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmbA5SKK7jHaharZKP6SryJaM7hGmWguxXPSovBWMNTN6W
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2020932917279719898
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUjDvw4gFS0
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/5845xx5ja9jkg2fgm1
This Monday, SUNSHINE invited us on a little trip to Ílhavo, home of Vista Alegre, Portugal’s most famous porcelain factory, founded in 1824 on the banks of the Boco River. Over two centuries the brand has grown from a single industrial unit into a full “Vista Alegre complex” with museum, chapel, worker housing, painting workshops, hotel, and flagship store, all built around the idea that everyday objects can also be pieces of art.
Today, visitors can move from the old kiln rooms and archival galleries straight into bright, contemporary showrooms where new collections sit beside reissues of classic patterns. The captured showroom mixes that history with collaborations from contemporary illustrators and designers; collections like the 2i – Ilustradores Internacionais series reproduce award‑winning children’s book illustrations on plates and trays, turning porcelain into a storytelling surface rather than just tableware. You can trace a whole narrative in a single place setting: characters wrapping around the rim of a bowl, bold color blocks cutting across a serving platter, or delicate line drawings that look like they’ve stepped off the page of a picture book.
In Ílhavo, these pieces sit only a short walk away from the original kilns and the museum’s tens of thousands of historic works, so a vivid plate like the one in this shot feels like the latest chapter in a very long Portuguese love affair with ceramics, light, and color. It’s also a quiet reminder of what Click preserves: not just a pretty object on a shelf, but the full stack behind it – craft traditions, local industry, and the people who keep reimagining what a simple plate or cup can say about where it comes from.
Where: 八重山郡, Okinawa, Japan
Feed: Architecture

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmWLbywb7nsPpzc8w8nFPW87UzgZLH181g1eWftzVc78nK
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2021305376042324090
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUltHwVjr_i
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/4ztntd5fnvs8h2a034
Our local Clickstar kept the streak of cultural Clicks going! This Click was taken in the Yaeyama district of Okinawa, on one of Japan’s southernmost islands, where the culture blends Japanese, Ryukyuan, and island traditions in a way you won’t find anywhere on the mainland. The small building with its low red‑tiled roof and coral‑stone wall reflects classic Ryukyuan architecture, developed to withstand typhoons with sturdy walls, deep eaves, and wind‑resistant tiles, and surrounded by tropical plants instead of the cedar forests you might associate with larger shrines further north.
In Okinawa, many sacred places are utaki – simple groves, clearings, or rocky outcrops where people have long prayed to ancestral and nature spirits rather than gathering in grand temple complexes. These spots are closely tied to local creation myths, seasonal harvests, and the rhythm of the sea, and are often cared for by community elders and noro priestesses who keep local rituals alive. A simple torii like the one in this Click often marks the boundary into such a space, signaling that you’re stepping from the everyday world into somewhere set aside for quiet offerings, festivals, and small ceremonies that tie the island community to its ancestors and to the ocean and forests around it.
Seen through the Click lens, this isn’t just a picturesque corner of Okinawa – it’s a snapshot of how spirituality, landscape, and architecture overlap in everyday life, preserved with provenance so that anyone, anywhere, can revisit this moment and know exactly where and how it was captured.
Where: Châteauneuf-du-Pape, Vaucluse, France
Feed: Food

Certified image https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmP5q4mrffScvWLuVgBHqcMLEQXtLMjkW2FPsRK1Pj2XS4
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2021685596565987641
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUoaDVUDqRH
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/1yfa1mvzsx56n9mn8qr
This Click was taken in Châteauneuf‑du‑Pape, the small Vaucluse village whose name literally means “the Pope’s new castle,” a nod to the 14th‑century popes in nearby Avignon who turned its vineyards into their summer source of wine. Under Pope John XXII the hilltop fortress was built and the local reds were elevated to “Vin du Pape,” shipped by barrel to royal and papal courts across Europe and laying the foundation for the appellation’s worldwide reputation today.
What makes Châteauneuf‑du‑Pape so distinctive is the landscape itself: many parcels are covered in large rounded galet stones that soak up heat during the day and slowly release it at night, helping Grenache and its companion grapes ripen fully even when the mistral winds sweep through the Rhône valley. Those same mistral winds keep the vines dry and healthy, reducing disease pressure and concentrating flavors in the grapes, which is why the region is known for powerful reds with notes of ripe fruit, herbs, and spice. Strict appellation rules limit yields and allow a traditional field blend of up to thirteen grape varieties, but Grenache usually leads the way, supported by Syrah, Mourvèdre and others to build structure and complexity.
Cellars here often hold long, neatly ordered rows of bottles like the ones in your picture – old and recent vintages resting in cool, stable conditions before being poured in tastings that explain the region’s stony soils, mistral winds and Grenache‑led blends. Many producers, including houses behind cuvées like Brotte’s “Les Hauts de Barville”, invite visitors to walk past these racks, hear the story of how the papal vineyards became a modern AOC, and then taste how time, terroir and patient ageing turn grape juice into something people travel halfway across the world to experience. Standing in front of shelves like these, you’re not just looking at wine inventory; you’re looking at layered years of weather, soil, and human decisions sealed behind each label, now captured and certified in a single Click.
We extend our heartfelt gratitude to our local Clickstar for bringing this quiet, barrel‑room perspective on one of France’s most storied appellations into the Digital Trust Network.
Where: Stockton, California, United States
Feed: Street Art

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmQQ24q6rqTbzeTYtvBxkbwj1KN1NH9JFYSV5CxRwUYkBj
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2022035435485299004
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUq4i7ljrVg
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/1a0dj1e4vje98yvs7j
From Japan’s sacred spots, this Clickstar takes us to another kind of holy ground – this wall is on Stockton’s Miracle Mile, where local artists are creating a large‑scale mural that brings Marvel’s Fantastic Four to life on the side of Al’s Comic Shop. What’s usually just a traffic corridor of shops and cafés has turned into an open‑air studio, with scaffolding, paint cans, and sketch outlines slowly resolving into classic comic‑book poses that older fans recognize instantly and younger visitors discover for the first time.
The mural is inspired by a rare 1980s comic issue whose cover jokingly called Stockton the hometown of the Fantastic Four, a playful idea that longtime shop owner Al Greco kept alive through in‑store events, signings, and local campaigns until Marvel – and Stan Lee himself – visited in 1986 to give the city an unofficial but unforgettable stamp of approval. That bit of fan‑driven lore has since become part of Stockton’s identity, woven into the way the city talks about itself and remembered by generations of readers who grew up buying their issues at Al’s.
The new piece celebrates roughly forty years of that connection: The Human Torch blazing in from one end, The Thing front and center, Mr. Fantastic and Invisible Woman stretching across the wall, with Dr. Doom looming on the edge like a villain about to step off the bricks. It has become a true community project, with local artists donating time, neighbors pitching in paint, ladders, and snacks, and families stopping by to take progress photos as new panels and details appear week by week.
All of this is happening in the run‑up to StocktonCon, the city’s twice‑yearly pop‑culture convention that now draws thousands of fans, cosplayers, and creators and gives this Central Valley town a chance to lean fully into its unexpected superhero legacy. Captured and certified as a Click, this mural isn’t just fan art on a wall – it’s a living record of how a throwaway comic‑book line, a persistent shop owner, and a tight‑knit community turned Stockton into a small but proud landmark in Marvel history.
Where: Studio City, California, United States
Feed: Sports

Certified image https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/Qmc7pgh21J7y6AaM4uAYNXThjP4zg6XShGXdagUhEaChf3
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2022358868345618472
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUtL5XVCBxS
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/17dcw0jftwv036zw7ch
SCVCRYPTO shared another Click of the craze around sports in Los Angeles! These Olympic rings are installed near Studio City in the San Fernando Valley, part of a growing wave of LA28 activations popping up across Greater Los Angeles as the city counts down to the 2028 Summer Olympics. Los Angeles will become the first non‑European city to host the Games three times – after 1932 and 1984 – with events spread across more than 40 venues from downtown L.A. to the Valley, Long Beach, Inglewood and even Oklahoma City.
What you’re seeing here is one small piece of a much bigger transformation. LA28 has leaned into using existing stadiums, arenas, and college campuses instead of building a lot of new infrastructure from scratch, so neighborhoods like the Valley are being branded early as part of the extended Olympic “park” rather than just as outlying suburbs. Studio City sits close to key training sites and potential competition venues in the Valley, which is why symbols like these rings are starting to appear on plazas, transit hubs, and popular walking routes – they double as landmarks for residents and as soft wayfinding for the global visitors who will be moving through the area once the Games begin.
The Valley itself is designated as one of the official sports‑park zones for LA28, so ring installations like this one are both a photo opportunity and a signal that the neighborhood is part of the Olympic footprint. Local businesses are already using them as a backdrop for promotions, community events, and youth sports sign‑ups, turning a static sculpture into a meeting point and a conversation starter. With ticket‑draw registrations already topping well over a million in their first day and sponsorships and cultural programs rolling out weekly, the city is in full build‑up mode – and standing in front of these rings on a blue‑sky February afternoon is a reminder that by the summer of 2028, this same stretch of L.A. will sit on a route traced by athletes, fans, and media from all over the world.
Seen as a Click, this moment freezes the in‑between phase: not yet the full spectacle of the Games, but the anticipation, branding, and quiet everyday excitement that comes before them – when an ordinary corner of Studio City starts to feel like part of a global stage.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week—five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real moments made verifiable and permanent inside the Digital Trust Network. From papal-era cellars and Ryukyuan rooftops to Stockton’s superhero mural and LA’s Olympic countdown, your Clickstars turned everyday scenes into on-chain records worth revisiting.
Want to be featured next? Keep Clicking, keep signing, and keep showing the world what authentic looks like—one capture at a time.
Now, go relax and enjoy your weekend!
And please, help us spread the word about Click. Encourage your friends and family to submit their Clicks too - it's becoming the top destination for the best, most reliable media. Every contribution helps us improve our collection and gets great content seen by more people.
Did you know that you can submit your favourite photos to ClickAI? It will provide feedback on how you can improve your next shots. Simply log into www.clickapp.com with your Click camera via WalletConnect, select your image, and click on AI✨ below your image.
With the latest update of the Nodle app, you can submit your favourite Clicks to the AI agent in the apps chat interface. Less friction, more opportunities!

You can then submit it to the AI contest for an entry fee, with the chance to win big if the AI's evaluation is favourable! Curious? Try it out today!

Did this catch your attention? Explore our blog post, Click: Beyond the Filter, to discover how the app powers the ecosystem behind the Digital Trust Network.
Happy Clicking, we can't wait to see what you share!
Hello fellow Clickstars!
Across this edition, we follow certified moments from Portugal’s ceramic heritage to Okinawa’s quiet sacred spaces and California’s street-level iconography—each one captured as-it-happened and anchored to the Click archive. These are street scenes, skylines, and small cultural details you’d normally scroll past, now preserved with provenance so the story stays intact—no filters, edits, or feed tricks required.
Settle in, and let this week’s Clicks of the Week take you through places and perspectives that feel worlds apart, yet connect instantly when the image itself is trusted.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X, Instagram and Hey.xyz or orb.club. They get a tip from Nodle for their contributions to the network, Click archive and creativity - if you want to get highlighted by the official accounts, keep on Clicking, yours might be next!
Support the network and its creators by following the official accounts, sharing, liking and commenting on the posts. Your support is crucial to the network's success!

In this week, the archive grew by 238 Clicks, totaling a staggering 71,092 certified media that got put on the chain. Week by week, contributions all over the world contribute to Nodle - the first Digital Trust Network that empowers creators and enterprises alike through their Android and iOS apps.
Where: Ílhavo, Aveiro, Portugal
Feed: General

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmbA5SKK7jHaharZKP6SryJaM7hGmWguxXPSovBWMNTN6W
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2020932917279719898
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUjDvw4gFS0
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/5845xx5ja9jkg2fgm1
This Monday, SUNSHINE invited us on a little trip to Ílhavo, home of Vista Alegre, Portugal’s most famous porcelain factory, founded in 1824 on the banks of the Boco River. Over two centuries the brand has grown from a single industrial unit into a full “Vista Alegre complex” with museum, chapel, worker housing, painting workshops, hotel, and flagship store, all built around the idea that everyday objects can also be pieces of art.
Today, visitors can move from the old kiln rooms and archival galleries straight into bright, contemporary showrooms where new collections sit beside reissues of classic patterns. The captured showroom mixes that history with collaborations from contemporary illustrators and designers; collections like the 2i – Ilustradores Internacionais series reproduce award‑winning children’s book illustrations on plates and trays, turning porcelain into a storytelling surface rather than just tableware. You can trace a whole narrative in a single place setting: characters wrapping around the rim of a bowl, bold color blocks cutting across a serving platter, or delicate line drawings that look like they’ve stepped off the page of a picture book.
In Ílhavo, these pieces sit only a short walk away from the original kilns and the museum’s tens of thousands of historic works, so a vivid plate like the one in this shot feels like the latest chapter in a very long Portuguese love affair with ceramics, light, and color. It’s also a quiet reminder of what Click preserves: not just a pretty object on a shelf, but the full stack behind it – craft traditions, local industry, and the people who keep reimagining what a simple plate or cup can say about where it comes from.
Where: 八重山郡, Okinawa, Japan
Feed: Architecture

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmWLbywb7nsPpzc8w8nFPW87UzgZLH181g1eWftzVc78nK
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2021305376042324090
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUltHwVjr_i
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/4ztntd5fnvs8h2a034
Our local Clickstar kept the streak of cultural Clicks going! This Click was taken in the Yaeyama district of Okinawa, on one of Japan’s southernmost islands, where the culture blends Japanese, Ryukyuan, and island traditions in a way you won’t find anywhere on the mainland. The small building with its low red‑tiled roof and coral‑stone wall reflects classic Ryukyuan architecture, developed to withstand typhoons with sturdy walls, deep eaves, and wind‑resistant tiles, and surrounded by tropical plants instead of the cedar forests you might associate with larger shrines further north.
In Okinawa, many sacred places are utaki – simple groves, clearings, or rocky outcrops where people have long prayed to ancestral and nature spirits rather than gathering in grand temple complexes. These spots are closely tied to local creation myths, seasonal harvests, and the rhythm of the sea, and are often cared for by community elders and noro priestesses who keep local rituals alive. A simple torii like the one in this Click often marks the boundary into such a space, signaling that you’re stepping from the everyday world into somewhere set aside for quiet offerings, festivals, and small ceremonies that tie the island community to its ancestors and to the ocean and forests around it.
Seen through the Click lens, this isn’t just a picturesque corner of Okinawa – it’s a snapshot of how spirituality, landscape, and architecture overlap in everyday life, preserved with provenance so that anyone, anywhere, can revisit this moment and know exactly where and how it was captured.
Where: Châteauneuf-du-Pape, Vaucluse, France
Feed: Food

Certified image https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmP5q4mrffScvWLuVgBHqcMLEQXtLMjkW2FPsRK1Pj2XS4
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2021685596565987641
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUoaDVUDqRH
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/1yfa1mvzsx56n9mn8qr
This Click was taken in Châteauneuf‑du‑Pape, the small Vaucluse village whose name literally means “the Pope’s new castle,” a nod to the 14th‑century popes in nearby Avignon who turned its vineyards into their summer source of wine. Under Pope John XXII the hilltop fortress was built and the local reds were elevated to “Vin du Pape,” shipped by barrel to royal and papal courts across Europe and laying the foundation for the appellation’s worldwide reputation today.
What makes Châteauneuf‑du‑Pape so distinctive is the landscape itself: many parcels are covered in large rounded galet stones that soak up heat during the day and slowly release it at night, helping Grenache and its companion grapes ripen fully even when the mistral winds sweep through the Rhône valley. Those same mistral winds keep the vines dry and healthy, reducing disease pressure and concentrating flavors in the grapes, which is why the region is known for powerful reds with notes of ripe fruit, herbs, and spice. Strict appellation rules limit yields and allow a traditional field blend of up to thirteen grape varieties, but Grenache usually leads the way, supported by Syrah, Mourvèdre and others to build structure and complexity.
Cellars here often hold long, neatly ordered rows of bottles like the ones in your picture – old and recent vintages resting in cool, stable conditions before being poured in tastings that explain the region’s stony soils, mistral winds and Grenache‑led blends. Many producers, including houses behind cuvées like Brotte’s “Les Hauts de Barville”, invite visitors to walk past these racks, hear the story of how the papal vineyards became a modern AOC, and then taste how time, terroir and patient ageing turn grape juice into something people travel halfway across the world to experience. Standing in front of shelves like these, you’re not just looking at wine inventory; you’re looking at layered years of weather, soil, and human decisions sealed behind each label, now captured and certified in a single Click.
We extend our heartfelt gratitude to our local Clickstar for bringing this quiet, barrel‑room perspective on one of France’s most storied appellations into the Digital Trust Network.
Where: Stockton, California, United States
Feed: Street Art

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmQQ24q6rqTbzeTYtvBxkbwj1KN1NH9JFYSV5CxRwUYkBj
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2022035435485299004
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUq4i7ljrVg
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/1a0dj1e4vje98yvs7j
From Japan’s sacred spots, this Clickstar takes us to another kind of holy ground – this wall is on Stockton’s Miracle Mile, where local artists are creating a large‑scale mural that brings Marvel’s Fantastic Four to life on the side of Al’s Comic Shop. What’s usually just a traffic corridor of shops and cafés has turned into an open‑air studio, with scaffolding, paint cans, and sketch outlines slowly resolving into classic comic‑book poses that older fans recognize instantly and younger visitors discover for the first time.
The mural is inspired by a rare 1980s comic issue whose cover jokingly called Stockton the hometown of the Fantastic Four, a playful idea that longtime shop owner Al Greco kept alive through in‑store events, signings, and local campaigns until Marvel – and Stan Lee himself – visited in 1986 to give the city an unofficial but unforgettable stamp of approval. That bit of fan‑driven lore has since become part of Stockton’s identity, woven into the way the city talks about itself and remembered by generations of readers who grew up buying their issues at Al’s.
The new piece celebrates roughly forty years of that connection: The Human Torch blazing in from one end, The Thing front and center, Mr. Fantastic and Invisible Woman stretching across the wall, with Dr. Doom looming on the edge like a villain about to step off the bricks. It has become a true community project, with local artists donating time, neighbors pitching in paint, ladders, and snacks, and families stopping by to take progress photos as new panels and details appear week by week.
All of this is happening in the run‑up to StocktonCon, the city’s twice‑yearly pop‑culture convention that now draws thousands of fans, cosplayers, and creators and gives this Central Valley town a chance to lean fully into its unexpected superhero legacy. Captured and certified as a Click, this mural isn’t just fan art on a wall – it’s a living record of how a throwaway comic‑book line, a persistent shop owner, and a tight‑knit community turned Stockton into a small but proud landmark in Marvel history.
Where: Studio City, California, United States
Feed: Sports

Certified image https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/Qmc7pgh21J7y6AaM4uAYNXThjP4zg6XShGXdagUhEaChf3
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2022358868345618472
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUtL5XVCBxS
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/17dcw0jftwv036zw7ch
SCVCRYPTO shared another Click of the craze around sports in Los Angeles! These Olympic rings are installed near Studio City in the San Fernando Valley, part of a growing wave of LA28 activations popping up across Greater Los Angeles as the city counts down to the 2028 Summer Olympics. Los Angeles will become the first non‑European city to host the Games three times – after 1932 and 1984 – with events spread across more than 40 venues from downtown L.A. to the Valley, Long Beach, Inglewood and even Oklahoma City.
What you’re seeing here is one small piece of a much bigger transformation. LA28 has leaned into using existing stadiums, arenas, and college campuses instead of building a lot of new infrastructure from scratch, so neighborhoods like the Valley are being branded early as part of the extended Olympic “park” rather than just as outlying suburbs. Studio City sits close to key training sites and potential competition venues in the Valley, which is why symbols like these rings are starting to appear on plazas, transit hubs, and popular walking routes – they double as landmarks for residents and as soft wayfinding for the global visitors who will be moving through the area once the Games begin.
The Valley itself is designated as one of the official sports‑park zones for LA28, so ring installations like this one are both a photo opportunity and a signal that the neighborhood is part of the Olympic footprint. Local businesses are already using them as a backdrop for promotions, community events, and youth sports sign‑ups, turning a static sculpture into a meeting point and a conversation starter. With ticket‑draw registrations already topping well over a million in their first day and sponsorships and cultural programs rolling out weekly, the city is in full build‑up mode – and standing in front of these rings on a blue‑sky February afternoon is a reminder that by the summer of 2028, this same stretch of L.A. will sit on a route traced by athletes, fans, and media from all over the world.
Seen as a Click, this moment freezes the in‑between phase: not yet the full spectacle of the Games, but the anticipation, branding, and quiet everyday excitement that comes before them – when an ordinary corner of Studio City starts to feel like part of a global stage.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week—five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real moments made verifiable and permanent inside the Digital Trust Network. From papal-era cellars and Ryukyuan rooftops to Stockton’s superhero mural and LA’s Olympic countdown, your Clickstars turned everyday scenes into on-chain records worth revisiting.
Want to be featured next? Keep Clicking, keep signing, and keep showing the world what authentic looks like—one capture at a time.
Now, go relax and enjoy your weekend!
And please, help us spread the word about Click. Encourage your friends and family to submit their Clicks too - it's becoming the top destination for the best, most reliable media. Every contribution helps us improve our collection and gets great content seen by more people.
Did you know that you can submit your favourite photos to ClickAI? It will provide feedback on how you can improve your next shots. Simply log into www.clickapp.com with your Click camera via WalletConnect, select your image, and click on AI✨ below your image.
With the latest update of the Nodle app, you can submit your favourite Clicks to the AI agent in the apps chat interface. Less friction, more opportunities!

You can then submit it to the AI contest for an entry fee, with the chance to win big if the AI's evaluation is favourable! Curious? Try it out today!

Did this catch your attention? Explore our blog post, Click: Beyond the Filter, to discover how the app powers the ecosystem behind the Digital Trust Network.
Happy Clicking, we can't wait to see what you share!

Nodle bids farewell to Polkadot
The final steps of the migration to ZKsync

Announcing the Creation of the Nodle DAO: A New Era of Inclusive Decentralized Governance
The Nodle Foundation is excited to announce the launch of the Nodle DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization), marking a major step toward decentralizing the Nodle Network and placing its future directly in the hands of its community. The creation of the Nodle DAO introduces a structured framework of Nodle Governance Proposals (NGPs), that anyone with a smartphone can vote on. These proposals will allow the community to have a say in the network’s development, ensuring that its direction re...

Winter Wonderland Click Contest
Winter is arriving for most of us and it’s time for the holidays, warm jackets, beanies and gloves! Now’s the time to post those clicks of all things winter and share those snow-covered Clicks in the official “Winter Contest” channel and on X. Let's see how creative you can get with all the holiday decor and winterscapes around you! The best submissions will be determined by our internal team of judges and the best entries will win ZK tokens! YEP, THAT’S RIGHT…ZK TOKENS!! Simply follow t...

Nodle bids farewell to Polkadot
The final steps of the migration to ZKsync

Announcing the Creation of the Nodle DAO: A New Era of Inclusive Decentralized Governance
The Nodle Foundation is excited to announce the launch of the Nodle DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization), marking a major step toward decentralizing the Nodle Network and placing its future directly in the hands of its community. The creation of the Nodle DAO introduces a structured framework of Nodle Governance Proposals (NGPs), that anyone with a smartphone can vote on. These proposals will allow the community to have a say in the network’s development, ensuring that its direction re...

Winter Wonderland Click Contest
Winter is arriving for most of us and it’s time for the holidays, warm jackets, beanies and gloves! Now’s the time to post those clicks of all things winter and share those snow-covered Clicks in the official “Winter Contest” channel and on X. Let's see how creative you can get with all the holiday decor and winterscapes around you! The best submissions will be determined by our internal team of judges and the best entries will win ZK tokens! YEP, THAT’S RIGHT…ZK TOKENS!! Simply follow t...
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