

Hello fellow Clickstars!
This edition jumps from Johannesburg’s inner‑city pulse to Malaysia’s neon festivals, Swiss carnival streets, Lebanon’s quiet mottos, and Vietnam’s massive open‑air stage—each moment captured as‑it‑happened and anchored to the Click archive as certified media. These are street scenes, skylines and small cultural details you might 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 carry you through places that feel worlds apart yet connect instantly the moment 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 452 Clicks, totaling a staggering 71,544 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: Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa
Feed: General

A new week. A fresh start. Just what happened to Johannesburg’s lively Gandhi Square, captured by KIDDDAPPER.
This photo was taken at Gandhi Square in the Central Business District of Johannesburg, one of the city's oldest and most symbolic public spaces. What started as Government Square in 1900 – the site of Johannesburg's first courthouse and the place where the British accepted the city's surrender during the Anglo‑Boer War – was renamed in 1999 to honor Mahatma Gandhi, who practiced as the city's first Indian attorney here in the early 1900s and began shaping his philosophy of Satyagraha (passive resistance) from these very streets.
After decades of decline, the square was revamped in the early 2000s as part of Johannesburg's inner‑city renewal: bus terminals were reorganized, new paving and lighting were installed, and a 2.5‑metre bronze statue of the young Gandhi in his lawyer's gown was placed at its center, facing the city he once walked as an immigrant lawyer. Around the perimeter, cafés, convenience stores and small eateries turned the square into a daytime meeting point for commuters, office workers and street traders, while 24‑hour security and CCTV helped shift its reputation from “no‑go zone” to busy civic hub.
Today, the bold "I ❤️ JOZI" sign has become one of the square's most photographed features, a bright selfie spot that captures the nickname locals use for Johannesburg and the pride that comes with a city constantly reinventing itself – from gold‑rush camp to apartheid battleground to Africa's largest and most energetic urban center. In a single Click, you get a snapshot of how history, daily hustle and urban branding collide: buses idling, people crossing between shifts, global fast‑food logos sharing space with informal traders, and that oversized heart quietly reminding everyone that Jozi’s story is as much about resilience and reinvention as it is about struggle.
Where: Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia
Feed: Events

AFFANDYFAIZ takes us yet on another journey and shares this Click from the Chinese New Year celebrations in Malaysia.
This photo was taken at i‑City in Shah Alam, Selangor, a theme park and entertainment hub that CNN Travel once listed among the world's brightest and most colorful places thanks to over a million LED lights that transform it into the "City of Digital Lights" every evening. By day, families come for water parks, shopping and indoor attractions; by night, the entire complex switches into spectacle mode as LED “trees,” façades and sculptures wash the park in saturated color and turn almost every corner into a photo spot.
The towering steel structure in the background is part of the SkyCity complex, which normally houses water slides and observation decks by day, but at night becomes a glowing scaffold of green and blue LEDs that frames the park's live shows. It works almost like a digital skyline for Shah Alam’s entertainment district, rising above the crowds while screens, spotlights and music pull people toward the main performance zones.
The fire performance captured here is part of i‑City's regular weekend entertainment lineup, but during Chinese New Year the shows are amplified with special cultural programming – lion dances, lantern displays numbering 10,000 across the park, God of Prosperity walkabouts and angpao reward events that run through to Chap Goh Meh. In between, pop‑up food stalls sell everything from grilled skewers to bubble tea, kids clutch light‑up toys, and families drift between rides, arcades and photo ops without ever really leaving the glow.
Malaysia's Chinese New Year celebrations are famously multicultural and high‑energy, and a spot like i‑City leans fully into that spirit: a fire dancer sending columns of flame skyward while families gather under strings of red lanterns, neon pulsing behind them, and the warm tropical night turning the whole scene into something between a street festival and an open‑air concert. It’s the kind of moment that feels almost unreal in person – heat from the fire, bass from the speakers, chatter in multiple languages – and that makes an authenticated Click especially powerful: proof that all that light and motion really did converge in a single instant.
Where: Laufen, Basel-Landschaft, Switzerland
Feed: General

BASILEA shares insights into Switzerland’s very own Fasnacht (you might know it better as Carnival).
This photo was taken during the Laufner Fasnacht, Laufen's three‑day carnival that ran from Sunday, February 15 to Tuesday, February 17, 2026. The timestamp – Tuesday at 14:11 – places it right at the "Grosser Umzug," the big Tuesday afternoon parade that follows the route from Bahnhofstrasse through the Vorstadtplatz and the old Stedtli, passing twice through the Amtshausgasse while spectators line the cobbled streets. By this point in the program, the town is fully in carnival mode: shop windows draped with colors, confetti already ankle‑deep in some corners, and the echo of drums bouncing between medieval façades.
Over 700 active participants join the Laufner Fasnacht each year, organized in cliques that include Guggenmusiken (brass bands playing deliberately off‑key), Pfeifer und Tambouren (fife‑and‑drum corps), Wagencliquen (float builders) and Schnitzelbänkler (satirical verse singers). Each group spends months preparing a "Sujet" – a theme that can range from local politics and global headlines to folk tales and inside jokes only the town understands – and that theme guides everything from costume design to floats and song lyrics. The elaborate costume in your shot – a carved skull mask crowned with antlers, wrapped in bark‑like armor – is a classic example of how Swiss carnival masking blends dark folklore with spectacular craft, where workshop basements turn into mini‑studios and a single mask might be hand‑carved, painted and assembled over an entire winter.
Laufen's Fasnacht sits in the broader tradition of Basel‑Landschaft carnival culture, which stretches from the world‑famous UNESCO‑listed Basler Fasnacht a week later to fire spectacles like the Chienbäse in Liestal. The same carnival DNA shows up here: drums that thump out the rhythm of the parade, lanterns and banners with sharp political cartoons, and that sense that for a few days, the usual order of things is turned on its head and the masks get to speak truth. But in Laufen it stays delightfully local: the whole town gathers, rain or shine, confetti sticking to wet cobblestones, and creatures from myth march past old shuttered houses as if this is exactly what the Stedtli was built for.
In a single Click, you catch more than just a costume – you capture the way a small Swiss town turns its streets into a stage, how history and satire walk side by side, and how a centuries‑old winter ritual still finds new ways to surprise the people who grew up with it.
Where: عكار, Akkar, Lebanon
Feed: Monuments

From the different events of the world, this Clickstar shares an intimate moment with us – the writing on the wall says “No risk. No money.” – a constant reminder to always give 100% whatever you do.
This photo was taken in Akkar, the northernmost region of Lebanon, not far from the Mediterranean coast and the foothills that rise toward the Syrian border. Akkar is known for its mix of quiet villages, farmland and mountain landscapes, so even a simple interior like this likely sits in a town where life runs at a slower, more traditional pace than in Beirut or Tripoli, with routines shaped by family businesses, agriculture and tight‑knit social circles.
Captured just before midday in February, the scene feels like that in‑between moment when a morning’s work is underway but the day still stretches ahead: the clock edging toward lunchtime, the room calm, and a bold little motto on the wall reminding you that progress always demands a bit of courage. The plastic chairs, tiled floor and modest décor (you can almost imagine the hum of a fridge, the clink of cups, the buzz of a cheap TV in the corner) tell you this could be a small shop, café or office where regulars drift in and out, trading news and ideas along with goods or services.
It’s a small snapshot of how entrepreneurship and big dreams show up even in out‑of‑the‑way corners of Lebanon – handwritten rules for life taped to the same walls that watch over everyday coffees, chats and mid‑day plans. In a country where economic uncertainty is part of daily life, that slogan reads less like a cliché and more like a survival strategy: a reminder that taking calculated risks, starting something of your own and backing yourself fully is often the only way forward.
Where: Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Feed: Festivities

Closing the week on a big stage again – this Clickstar takes us on a journey to Ho Chi Minh City and shares this amazing experience with us.
The photo was taken in downtown Ho Chi Minh City, at an outdoor stage set up in front of the Municipal Theatre, during a special art program titled “Ánh sáng niềm tin và khát vọng” – “The Light of Faith and Aspiration” – on the afternoon of Sunday, January 25, 2026. The Municipal Theatre, with its French colonial façade facing Nguyen Hue, has become one of the city’s most recognizable cultural backdrops, so placing a giant LED stage here essentially turns the entire boulevard into a temporary open‑air arena.
This show was organized by the city’s Department of Culture and Sports together with the Ho Chi Minh City Symphony Orchestra and Opera House, bringing together well‑known Vietnamese singers, choirs and dance troupes on a massive LED stage washed in the city’s signature red. Between performances, the screens behind the artists flash archival footage, animated graphics and slogans about unity and progress, so the whole production feels part concert, part civic ceremony.
The program was part of a series of big cultural events in early 2026 that celebrated the success of the 14th National Party Congress and looked ahead to Vietnam’s development goals, using music, visuals and mass choreography to express pride, resilience and youthful ambition. The repertoire blends revolutionary songs, contemporary pop, orchestral arrangements and dance pieces, so grandparents and students in the crowd can all find something that speaks to their own memories of the city.
Thousands of students and young volunteers were involved on and off stage, turning Nguyen Hue and the theatre square into one big rehearsal room for hope – a snapshot of Saigon as a modern, hyper‑energetic city that still loves gathering in the streets to sing about its future. In a single Click, you get the glow of the LEDs, the sea of phone screens, flags and banners waving above the crowd and the sense that, for one evening, the entire city is breathing in time with the music.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week—five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real moments turned into verifiable, on‑chain records inside the Digital Trust Network. Your Clickstars keep proving that everyday scenes become something bigger when they’re signed, stored and surfaced as authentic media instead of disposable content.
Want to be featured next? Keep Clicking, keep signing, and keep showing the world what authentic looks like—one capture at a time.
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!
This edition jumps from Johannesburg’s inner‑city pulse to Malaysia’s neon festivals, Swiss carnival streets, Lebanon’s quiet mottos, and Vietnam’s massive open‑air stage—each moment captured as‑it‑happened and anchored to the Click archive as certified media. These are street scenes, skylines and small cultural details you might 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 carry you through places that feel worlds apart yet connect instantly the moment 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 452 Clicks, totaling a staggering 71,544 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: Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa
Feed: General

A new week. A fresh start. Just what happened to Johannesburg’s lively Gandhi Square, captured by KIDDDAPPER.
This photo was taken at Gandhi Square in the Central Business District of Johannesburg, one of the city's oldest and most symbolic public spaces. What started as Government Square in 1900 – the site of Johannesburg's first courthouse and the place where the British accepted the city's surrender during the Anglo‑Boer War – was renamed in 1999 to honor Mahatma Gandhi, who practiced as the city's first Indian attorney here in the early 1900s and began shaping his philosophy of Satyagraha (passive resistance) from these very streets.
After decades of decline, the square was revamped in the early 2000s as part of Johannesburg's inner‑city renewal: bus terminals were reorganized, new paving and lighting were installed, and a 2.5‑metre bronze statue of the young Gandhi in his lawyer's gown was placed at its center, facing the city he once walked as an immigrant lawyer. Around the perimeter, cafés, convenience stores and small eateries turned the square into a daytime meeting point for commuters, office workers and street traders, while 24‑hour security and CCTV helped shift its reputation from “no‑go zone” to busy civic hub.
Today, the bold "I ❤️ JOZI" sign has become one of the square's most photographed features, a bright selfie spot that captures the nickname locals use for Johannesburg and the pride that comes with a city constantly reinventing itself – from gold‑rush camp to apartheid battleground to Africa's largest and most energetic urban center. In a single Click, you get a snapshot of how history, daily hustle and urban branding collide: buses idling, people crossing between shifts, global fast‑food logos sharing space with informal traders, and that oversized heart quietly reminding everyone that Jozi’s story is as much about resilience and reinvention as it is about struggle.
Where: Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia
Feed: Events

AFFANDYFAIZ takes us yet on another journey and shares this Click from the Chinese New Year celebrations in Malaysia.
This photo was taken at i‑City in Shah Alam, Selangor, a theme park and entertainment hub that CNN Travel once listed among the world's brightest and most colorful places thanks to over a million LED lights that transform it into the "City of Digital Lights" every evening. By day, families come for water parks, shopping and indoor attractions; by night, the entire complex switches into spectacle mode as LED “trees,” façades and sculptures wash the park in saturated color and turn almost every corner into a photo spot.
The towering steel structure in the background is part of the SkyCity complex, which normally houses water slides and observation decks by day, but at night becomes a glowing scaffold of green and blue LEDs that frames the park's live shows. It works almost like a digital skyline for Shah Alam’s entertainment district, rising above the crowds while screens, spotlights and music pull people toward the main performance zones.
The fire performance captured here is part of i‑City's regular weekend entertainment lineup, but during Chinese New Year the shows are amplified with special cultural programming – lion dances, lantern displays numbering 10,000 across the park, God of Prosperity walkabouts and angpao reward events that run through to Chap Goh Meh. In between, pop‑up food stalls sell everything from grilled skewers to bubble tea, kids clutch light‑up toys, and families drift between rides, arcades and photo ops without ever really leaving the glow.
Malaysia's Chinese New Year celebrations are famously multicultural and high‑energy, and a spot like i‑City leans fully into that spirit: a fire dancer sending columns of flame skyward while families gather under strings of red lanterns, neon pulsing behind them, and the warm tropical night turning the whole scene into something between a street festival and an open‑air concert. It’s the kind of moment that feels almost unreal in person – heat from the fire, bass from the speakers, chatter in multiple languages – and that makes an authenticated Click especially powerful: proof that all that light and motion really did converge in a single instant.
Where: Laufen, Basel-Landschaft, Switzerland
Feed: General

BASILEA shares insights into Switzerland’s very own Fasnacht (you might know it better as Carnival).
This photo was taken during the Laufner Fasnacht, Laufen's three‑day carnival that ran from Sunday, February 15 to Tuesday, February 17, 2026. The timestamp – Tuesday at 14:11 – places it right at the "Grosser Umzug," the big Tuesday afternoon parade that follows the route from Bahnhofstrasse through the Vorstadtplatz and the old Stedtli, passing twice through the Amtshausgasse while spectators line the cobbled streets. By this point in the program, the town is fully in carnival mode: shop windows draped with colors, confetti already ankle‑deep in some corners, and the echo of drums bouncing between medieval façades.
Over 700 active participants join the Laufner Fasnacht each year, organized in cliques that include Guggenmusiken (brass bands playing deliberately off‑key), Pfeifer und Tambouren (fife‑and‑drum corps), Wagencliquen (float builders) and Schnitzelbänkler (satirical verse singers). Each group spends months preparing a "Sujet" – a theme that can range from local politics and global headlines to folk tales and inside jokes only the town understands – and that theme guides everything from costume design to floats and song lyrics. The elaborate costume in your shot – a carved skull mask crowned with antlers, wrapped in bark‑like armor – is a classic example of how Swiss carnival masking blends dark folklore with spectacular craft, where workshop basements turn into mini‑studios and a single mask might be hand‑carved, painted and assembled over an entire winter.
Laufen's Fasnacht sits in the broader tradition of Basel‑Landschaft carnival culture, which stretches from the world‑famous UNESCO‑listed Basler Fasnacht a week later to fire spectacles like the Chienbäse in Liestal. The same carnival DNA shows up here: drums that thump out the rhythm of the parade, lanterns and banners with sharp political cartoons, and that sense that for a few days, the usual order of things is turned on its head and the masks get to speak truth. But in Laufen it stays delightfully local: the whole town gathers, rain or shine, confetti sticking to wet cobblestones, and creatures from myth march past old shuttered houses as if this is exactly what the Stedtli was built for.
In a single Click, you catch more than just a costume – you capture the way a small Swiss town turns its streets into a stage, how history and satire walk side by side, and how a centuries‑old winter ritual still finds new ways to surprise the people who grew up with it.
Where: عكار, Akkar, Lebanon
Feed: Monuments

From the different events of the world, this Clickstar shares an intimate moment with us – the writing on the wall says “No risk. No money.” – a constant reminder to always give 100% whatever you do.
This photo was taken in Akkar, the northernmost region of Lebanon, not far from the Mediterranean coast and the foothills that rise toward the Syrian border. Akkar is known for its mix of quiet villages, farmland and mountain landscapes, so even a simple interior like this likely sits in a town where life runs at a slower, more traditional pace than in Beirut or Tripoli, with routines shaped by family businesses, agriculture and tight‑knit social circles.
Captured just before midday in February, the scene feels like that in‑between moment when a morning’s work is underway but the day still stretches ahead: the clock edging toward lunchtime, the room calm, and a bold little motto on the wall reminding you that progress always demands a bit of courage. The plastic chairs, tiled floor and modest décor (you can almost imagine the hum of a fridge, the clink of cups, the buzz of a cheap TV in the corner) tell you this could be a small shop, café or office where regulars drift in and out, trading news and ideas along with goods or services.
It’s a small snapshot of how entrepreneurship and big dreams show up even in out‑of‑the‑way corners of Lebanon – handwritten rules for life taped to the same walls that watch over everyday coffees, chats and mid‑day plans. In a country where economic uncertainty is part of daily life, that slogan reads less like a cliché and more like a survival strategy: a reminder that taking calculated risks, starting something of your own and backing yourself fully is often the only way forward.
Where: Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Feed: Festivities

Closing the week on a big stage again – this Clickstar takes us on a journey to Ho Chi Minh City and shares this amazing experience with us.
The photo was taken in downtown Ho Chi Minh City, at an outdoor stage set up in front of the Municipal Theatre, during a special art program titled “Ánh sáng niềm tin và khát vọng” – “The Light of Faith and Aspiration” – on the afternoon of Sunday, January 25, 2026. The Municipal Theatre, with its French colonial façade facing Nguyen Hue, has become one of the city’s most recognizable cultural backdrops, so placing a giant LED stage here essentially turns the entire boulevard into a temporary open‑air arena.
This show was organized by the city’s Department of Culture and Sports together with the Ho Chi Minh City Symphony Orchestra and Opera House, bringing together well‑known Vietnamese singers, choirs and dance troupes on a massive LED stage washed in the city’s signature red. Between performances, the screens behind the artists flash archival footage, animated graphics and slogans about unity and progress, so the whole production feels part concert, part civic ceremony.
The program was part of a series of big cultural events in early 2026 that celebrated the success of the 14th National Party Congress and looked ahead to Vietnam’s development goals, using music, visuals and mass choreography to express pride, resilience and youthful ambition. The repertoire blends revolutionary songs, contemporary pop, orchestral arrangements and dance pieces, so grandparents and students in the crowd can all find something that speaks to their own memories of the city.
Thousands of students and young volunteers were involved on and off stage, turning Nguyen Hue and the theatre square into one big rehearsal room for hope – a snapshot of Saigon as a modern, hyper‑energetic city that still loves gathering in the streets to sing about its future. In a single Click, you get the glow of the LEDs, the sea of phone screens, flags and banners waving above the crowd and the sense that, for one evening, the entire city is breathing in time with the music.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week—five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real moments turned into verifiable, on‑chain records inside the Digital Trust Network. Your Clickstars keep proving that everyday scenes become something bigger when they’re signed, stored and surfaced as authentic media instead of disposable content.
Want to be featured next? Keep Clicking, keep signing, and keep showing the world what authentic looks like—one capture at a time.
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!
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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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