

Hello fellow Clickstars!
This week’s Clicks of the Week move through places where memory, pride, celebration, quiet nature, and everyday work all leave a mark—then get locked into the Click archive as certified media, so each scene stays as it was when the shutter fell. These are moments you could easily pass by in real life—a forest path, a construction site, a street dance, a lake at dusk, an old truck after midnight—yet each one becomes instantly more powerful once it’s signed and preserved with provenance inside the Digital Trust Network.
Settle in and let these five Clicks carry you from Riga’s still, stone-filled remembrance to Maharashtra’s rising monument-in-the-making, from Beverly Hills’ Lunar New Year drumbeats to Silesia’s post‑industrial lakes turned local escape, and finally into Puerto Rico’s green interior, where time and weather can turn utility into something like folklore.
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 380 Clicks, totaling a staggering 71,924 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: Riga, Latvia
Feed: Monuments

REBELCODER opens the week in Biķernieki Forest on the eastern edge of Riga, at the memorial that marks Latvia's largest Holocaust killing site. The central white concrete structure visible at the end of the path houses a shrine containing bronze sleeves with the names of over 31,000 documented victims, while the black granite altar at its base carries an inscription from the Book of Job — "Earth, don't cover my blood. Let my cry have no place to rest" — engraved in Latvian, Russian, German and Hebrew.
Surrounding the altar is a "field of stones": roughly 4,000 rough-hewn granite markers of black, grey and reddish tones, sourced from the Zhytomyr region in Ukraine and arranged in a grid of forty-five squares to evoke a traditional Jewish cemetery. Between 1941 and 1944, an estimated 30,000 to 46,000 people were murdered here and buried in 55 mass graves scattered among the pines — Latvian and Western European Jews, Soviet prisoners of war, and political opponents of the Nazi regime. Stone plaques bearing the names of 57 European cities line the paths, a reminder that the victims were brought from Berlin, Vienna, Prague, Hamburg and dozens of other towns, turning this quiet forest into a site of shared European remembrance rather than a purely local memorial.
Latvian architect Sergejs Rižs spent fifteen years designing the complex, calling it "his human obligation." Art historians praised him for adapting the memorial concept of Treblinka into something that reconciles with the surrounding landscape rather than overwhelming it. In winter, as this Click shows, fresh snow caps each jagged stone and muffles every sound, so walking up the central path on a bright February afternoon feels almost unreal — beauty and horror layered in the same place, asking anyone who passes through not just to look, but to bear witness.
Where: Pimpri-Chinchwad, Maharashtra, India
Feed: Monuments

From a monument to the past we move to the creation of a future one. HARSHARYAN captured this Click in Moshi‑Borhadewadi, in the industrial satellite city of Pimpri‑Chinchwad on the outskirts of Pune, at the construction site of the "Statue of Hindubhushan," a colossal full‑body monument to Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj. The bronze warrior statue stands about 100 feet tall on a 40‑foot pedestal, bringing the total height to around 140 feet and placing it among the tallest statues in India dedicated to a single historical figure. It was sculpted by Ram Sutar, the same artist behind the Statue of Unity in Gujarat, and the ₹48‑crore (approximately $5.6 million USD) project is funded by the Pimpri‑Chinchwad Municipal Corporation.
Sambhaji was the eldest son of Shivaji, the founder of the Maratha Empire, and succeeded him as Chhatrapati in 1681. For nine years he led fierce resistance against the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb's campaigns into the Deccan, fighting alongside commanders like Hambirrao Mohite and refusing to submit even after his capture in 1689. Aurangzeb subjected Sambhaji to forty days of brutal torture and demanded he convert to Islam; Sambhaji refused, and was executed at Tulapur on the banks of the Bhima River. His sacrifice became a rallying cry that united the Marathas and fueled decades of further resistance against Mughal rule.
The statue and its surrounding Shambhu Srishti theme park are being built to honour that legacy. When fully completed, the complex will include a 10‑foot statue of Hambirrao Mohite, sculptures of sixteen Maratha sardars and mavlas, bronze murals, an open‑air theatre, and holographic presentations telling the story of Sambhaji's life. Inauguration events in September 2025 already drew thousands, with over 3,000 dhol drummers and 1,000 tasha players performing alongside traditional shastra‑pooja sword rituals. This Click captures the site still mid‑construction in February 2026, a patch of open ground that is steadily transforming into a major cultural landmark and pilgrimage spot for Maratha history and pride.
Where: Beverly Hills, California, United States
Feed: Festivities

SCVCRYPTO caught a spontaneous street performance during Beverly Hills' Lunar New Year celebrations for the Year of the Horse. The 2026 Chinese zodiac year started on February 17 and brought with it the energy of the Fire Horse — a rare combination that appears only once every sixty years, symbolising bold action and transformation. Venues across Beverly Hills marked the occasion with lion dances, traditional music, specialty menus and family‑friendly street events, from The Wallis performing arts centre hosting a full Family Fest to restaurants like Xi'an and Crustacean staging their own lion‑dance performances.
The costume in this Click is a Southern‑style lion, recognisable by its large, expressive head with blinking eyes and a shaggy white fur body. Inside are usually two performers, one controlling the head and the other the tail, moving in tight coordination to the beat of drums and cymbals. In Chinese tradition the lion dance is performed to chase away evil spirits and invite good fortune, which is why it appears at Lunar New Year celebrations, business openings and major milestones — essentially anywhere a fresh start calls for a burst of positive energy.
On that late‑February day in Beverly Hills, the mix of bright red costume, California sunshine and bystanders filming on their phones turns a centuries‑old ritual into something completely contemporary — ancient rhythm, modern audience, same wish for luck in the year ahead.
Where: Dąbrowa Górnicza, Silesian Voivodeship, Poland
Feed: Nature

CRYPTORROCUS captured this serene moment by one of the Pogoria lakes in Dąbrowa Górnicza, a post‑industrial city in southern Poland's Silesian Voivodeship. The coordinates point to Pogoria III, the best‑known of the four reservoirs that make up the so‑called Pojezierze Dąbrowskie — the "Dąbrowa Lake District." The lake was created in 1975 when disused sand quarries, which had once supplied backfill material for the region's coal mines, were deliberately flooded with water from the Czarna Przemsza river system. What was once a scarred mining landscape is now a 2 km² body of water reaching depths of up to 18 metres, wrapped in a six‑kilometre paved path that locals use year‑round for walks, runs and bike rides.
In summer Pogoria III is the most popular recreational spot in the Silesian urban sprawl, with a sandy beach, a wooden pier, food vendors, sailing and windsurfing clubs, and a strict "silence zone" banning motorised boats to keep the water calm. The lake's clean waters — filtered naturally by dense beds of aquatic plants — support pike, perch, eels, carp and even crayfish. Parts of the wider Pogoria complex hold protected-landscape status, preserving remnants of post‑glacial vegetation and bird habitats that would otherwise have been swallowed by urban expansion.
On a late February evening like in this Click, the scene couldn't be further from its summer beach mood. Thawing ice leaves the path wet, the sky sinks into deep blue, and the shoreline that usually hums with people falls silent — almost minimalist, with a lone tree and its reflection standing guard over the water. It's a reminder that these man‑made lakes have quietly outgrown their industrial origins and become genuine sanctuaries, as much a part of Silesian identity as the coal mines they replaced.
Where: Corozal, Puerto Rico
Feed: Festivities

The week closes with a Click from Corozal, a small mountain town nestled in the green hills of Puerto Rico's Cordillera Central, about an hour inland from San Juan. Founded in 1795 and officially chartered in 1804, Corozal takes its name from the corozo palm that once covered the area. The Taíno cacique Orocobix and his Jatibonicu tribe inhabited this land long before Spanish settlers arrived, and stone petroglyphs in the surrounding hills still attest to that earlier chapter. Today locals know Corozal as "La Cuna del Voleibol" — the cradle of volleyball — and "La Capital del Centro de la Isla," but it's equally defined by its plantain farms, which are celebrated every year at the Festival Nacional del Plátano.
Corozal's narrow country roads wind between green ridges, rivers like the Cibuco and the Grande de Manatí, and small farms where trucks once did the heavy lifting, hauling crops and materials between the highlands and the coastal cities. It's a place where old machinery is rarely thrown away; instead it gets parked under a roof, slowly gathering moss and stories while newer vehicles take over the daily work. The municipality weathered Hurricane Maria in 2017 when the Cibuco River flooded the police station so severely that officers had to form a human chain on the rooftop to survive — a vivid reminder of how tightly life here is tied to the land and the weather.
With dry leaves around its tires and tropical trees in the background, this Clickstar captured that quiet in‑between moment where an old truck has stopped being purely useful and has become part of the landscape and local memory instead — rusting gently in a town that measures time not by clocks but by seasons of planting and harvest.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week—five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real places and real moments, captured as-they-happened and turned into verifiable, on‑chain records inside the Digital Trust Network. Week after week, Clickstars prove that authenticity isn’t a vibe or a filter—it’s a choice, and when a moment is signed, stored, and surfaced as trusted media, even the simplest scene can outlast the scroll.
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!
This week’s Clicks of the Week move through places where memory, pride, celebration, quiet nature, and everyday work all leave a mark—then get locked into the Click archive as certified media, so each scene stays as it was when the shutter fell. These are moments you could easily pass by in real life—a forest path, a construction site, a street dance, a lake at dusk, an old truck after midnight—yet each one becomes instantly more powerful once it’s signed and preserved with provenance inside the Digital Trust Network.
Settle in and let these five Clicks carry you from Riga’s still, stone-filled remembrance to Maharashtra’s rising monument-in-the-making, from Beverly Hills’ Lunar New Year drumbeats to Silesia’s post‑industrial lakes turned local escape, and finally into Puerto Rico’s green interior, where time and weather can turn utility into something like folklore.
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 380 Clicks, totaling a staggering 71,924 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: Riga, Latvia
Feed: Monuments

REBELCODER opens the week in Biķernieki Forest on the eastern edge of Riga, at the memorial that marks Latvia's largest Holocaust killing site. The central white concrete structure visible at the end of the path houses a shrine containing bronze sleeves with the names of over 31,000 documented victims, while the black granite altar at its base carries an inscription from the Book of Job — "Earth, don't cover my blood. Let my cry have no place to rest" — engraved in Latvian, Russian, German and Hebrew.
Surrounding the altar is a "field of stones": roughly 4,000 rough-hewn granite markers of black, grey and reddish tones, sourced from the Zhytomyr region in Ukraine and arranged in a grid of forty-five squares to evoke a traditional Jewish cemetery. Between 1941 and 1944, an estimated 30,000 to 46,000 people were murdered here and buried in 55 mass graves scattered among the pines — Latvian and Western European Jews, Soviet prisoners of war, and political opponents of the Nazi regime. Stone plaques bearing the names of 57 European cities line the paths, a reminder that the victims were brought from Berlin, Vienna, Prague, Hamburg and dozens of other towns, turning this quiet forest into a site of shared European remembrance rather than a purely local memorial.
Latvian architect Sergejs Rižs spent fifteen years designing the complex, calling it "his human obligation." Art historians praised him for adapting the memorial concept of Treblinka into something that reconciles with the surrounding landscape rather than overwhelming it. In winter, as this Click shows, fresh snow caps each jagged stone and muffles every sound, so walking up the central path on a bright February afternoon feels almost unreal — beauty and horror layered in the same place, asking anyone who passes through not just to look, but to bear witness.
Where: Pimpri-Chinchwad, Maharashtra, India
Feed: Monuments

From a monument to the past we move to the creation of a future one. HARSHARYAN captured this Click in Moshi‑Borhadewadi, in the industrial satellite city of Pimpri‑Chinchwad on the outskirts of Pune, at the construction site of the "Statue of Hindubhushan," a colossal full‑body monument to Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj. The bronze warrior statue stands about 100 feet tall on a 40‑foot pedestal, bringing the total height to around 140 feet and placing it among the tallest statues in India dedicated to a single historical figure. It was sculpted by Ram Sutar, the same artist behind the Statue of Unity in Gujarat, and the ₹48‑crore (approximately $5.6 million USD) project is funded by the Pimpri‑Chinchwad Municipal Corporation.
Sambhaji was the eldest son of Shivaji, the founder of the Maratha Empire, and succeeded him as Chhatrapati in 1681. For nine years he led fierce resistance against the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb's campaigns into the Deccan, fighting alongside commanders like Hambirrao Mohite and refusing to submit even after his capture in 1689. Aurangzeb subjected Sambhaji to forty days of brutal torture and demanded he convert to Islam; Sambhaji refused, and was executed at Tulapur on the banks of the Bhima River. His sacrifice became a rallying cry that united the Marathas and fueled decades of further resistance against Mughal rule.
The statue and its surrounding Shambhu Srishti theme park are being built to honour that legacy. When fully completed, the complex will include a 10‑foot statue of Hambirrao Mohite, sculptures of sixteen Maratha sardars and mavlas, bronze murals, an open‑air theatre, and holographic presentations telling the story of Sambhaji's life. Inauguration events in September 2025 already drew thousands, with over 3,000 dhol drummers and 1,000 tasha players performing alongside traditional shastra‑pooja sword rituals. This Click captures the site still mid‑construction in February 2026, a patch of open ground that is steadily transforming into a major cultural landmark and pilgrimage spot for Maratha history and pride.
Where: Beverly Hills, California, United States
Feed: Festivities

SCVCRYPTO caught a spontaneous street performance during Beverly Hills' Lunar New Year celebrations for the Year of the Horse. The 2026 Chinese zodiac year started on February 17 and brought with it the energy of the Fire Horse — a rare combination that appears only once every sixty years, symbolising bold action and transformation. Venues across Beverly Hills marked the occasion with lion dances, traditional music, specialty menus and family‑friendly street events, from The Wallis performing arts centre hosting a full Family Fest to restaurants like Xi'an and Crustacean staging their own lion‑dance performances.
The costume in this Click is a Southern‑style lion, recognisable by its large, expressive head with blinking eyes and a shaggy white fur body. Inside are usually two performers, one controlling the head and the other the tail, moving in tight coordination to the beat of drums and cymbals. In Chinese tradition the lion dance is performed to chase away evil spirits and invite good fortune, which is why it appears at Lunar New Year celebrations, business openings and major milestones — essentially anywhere a fresh start calls for a burst of positive energy.
On that late‑February day in Beverly Hills, the mix of bright red costume, California sunshine and bystanders filming on their phones turns a centuries‑old ritual into something completely contemporary — ancient rhythm, modern audience, same wish for luck in the year ahead.
Where: Dąbrowa Górnicza, Silesian Voivodeship, Poland
Feed: Nature

CRYPTORROCUS captured this serene moment by one of the Pogoria lakes in Dąbrowa Górnicza, a post‑industrial city in southern Poland's Silesian Voivodeship. The coordinates point to Pogoria III, the best‑known of the four reservoirs that make up the so‑called Pojezierze Dąbrowskie — the "Dąbrowa Lake District." The lake was created in 1975 when disused sand quarries, which had once supplied backfill material for the region's coal mines, were deliberately flooded with water from the Czarna Przemsza river system. What was once a scarred mining landscape is now a 2 km² body of water reaching depths of up to 18 metres, wrapped in a six‑kilometre paved path that locals use year‑round for walks, runs and bike rides.
In summer Pogoria III is the most popular recreational spot in the Silesian urban sprawl, with a sandy beach, a wooden pier, food vendors, sailing and windsurfing clubs, and a strict "silence zone" banning motorised boats to keep the water calm. The lake's clean waters — filtered naturally by dense beds of aquatic plants — support pike, perch, eels, carp and even crayfish. Parts of the wider Pogoria complex hold protected-landscape status, preserving remnants of post‑glacial vegetation and bird habitats that would otherwise have been swallowed by urban expansion.
On a late February evening like in this Click, the scene couldn't be further from its summer beach mood. Thawing ice leaves the path wet, the sky sinks into deep blue, and the shoreline that usually hums with people falls silent — almost minimalist, with a lone tree and its reflection standing guard over the water. It's a reminder that these man‑made lakes have quietly outgrown their industrial origins and become genuine sanctuaries, as much a part of Silesian identity as the coal mines they replaced.
Where: Corozal, Puerto Rico
Feed: Festivities

The week closes with a Click from Corozal, a small mountain town nestled in the green hills of Puerto Rico's Cordillera Central, about an hour inland from San Juan. Founded in 1795 and officially chartered in 1804, Corozal takes its name from the corozo palm that once covered the area. The Taíno cacique Orocobix and his Jatibonicu tribe inhabited this land long before Spanish settlers arrived, and stone petroglyphs in the surrounding hills still attest to that earlier chapter. Today locals know Corozal as "La Cuna del Voleibol" — the cradle of volleyball — and "La Capital del Centro de la Isla," but it's equally defined by its plantain farms, which are celebrated every year at the Festival Nacional del Plátano.
Corozal's narrow country roads wind between green ridges, rivers like the Cibuco and the Grande de Manatí, and small farms where trucks once did the heavy lifting, hauling crops and materials between the highlands and the coastal cities. It's a place where old machinery is rarely thrown away; instead it gets parked under a roof, slowly gathering moss and stories while newer vehicles take over the daily work. The municipality weathered Hurricane Maria in 2017 when the Cibuco River flooded the police station so severely that officers had to form a human chain on the rooftop to survive — a vivid reminder of how tightly life here is tied to the land and the weather.
With dry leaves around its tires and tropical trees in the background, this Clickstar captured that quiet in‑between moment where an old truck has stopped being purely useful and has become part of the landscape and local memory instead — rusting gently in a town that measures time not by clocks but by seasons of planting and harvest.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week—five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real places and real moments, captured as-they-happened and turned into verifiable, on‑chain records inside the Digital Trust Network. Week after week, Clickstars prove that authenticity isn’t a vibe or a filter—it’s a choice, and when a moment is signed, stored, and surfaced as trusted media, even the simplest scene can outlast the scroll.
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!
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Nodle bids farewell to Polkadot
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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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