
Hello fellow Clickstars!
This week's Clicks of the Week travel across five countries and five very different kinds of human experience — a classroom where blocks and laughter hold examination nerves at bay, a hilltop cemetery where granite and silence carry the weight of a city's liberation, a Cathedral Quarter counter stacked with loaded fries and ramen steam, a Breton cove where spring tides and old customs paths converge, and an Attic sky crossed by jet formations on Greece's most celebrated national day. Each of these moments happened, was felt, and is now certifiably real — signed and stored inside the Digital Trust Network exactly as it looked in the split second the shutter dropped.
Settle in and let these five Clicks carry you from Ho Chi Minh City's game-filled classrooms to Bratislava's wind-swept memorial hill, from Belfast's Japanese-fusion haven to a wild Finistère beach where a yellow shovel connects the present to centuries of Breton tide-lore, and finally up into the Attic sky above Ilioupoli, where fighter jets and national pride meet once a year in a roar that never quite grows ordinary.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X, Instagram. 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 283 Clicks, totaling a staggering 73,316 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: Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Feed: General

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2036167415436894677
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWPTlM0jpsX
Back to school on a Monday can be tiring, but recess lifts the mood. This Click shows a group of secondary students in Ho Chi Minh City crowding around a Jenga tower during a break or activity period, a scene that fits well with how many local teachers now mix traditional lessons with games to keep big classes engaged. In public schools here, the academic year is divided into two semesters — Semester I running from September through January and Semester II picking up in mid-January and running through to the end of May — so any moment that turns review into play, like using Jenga blocks for vocabulary or quiz questions, becomes an instant favourite with learners who are usually used to textbook-heavy instruction.
The Click was captured in late March, a time when Semester II is in full swing and students are starting to feel the pressure of assessments that will peak before the May school-year close and, for older students, the high-school graduation tests that follow. Around Ho Chi Minh City there is a small lore among students that the weeks after Tet are the "make-or-break" period of the year: after the nine-day New Year break clubs start up again, teachers ramp up revision games, and classes invent their own recurring traditions — from board-game afternoons to friendly inter-class competitions — to make the climb toward those exams feel a little less like a stack of books and a little more like this Jenga tower: shaky, noisy, but very much shared.
A big thank you to our local Clickstar for sharing this moment with us!
Where: Bratislava, Bratislava, Slovakia
Feed: Monuments

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2036480287043903694
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWRh3sFCJjS
From easy breaks, this Clickstar takes us somewhere considerably more weighty. This Click shows the Slavín memorial, Bratislava's vast hilltop monument and military cemetery dedicated to the 6,845 Soviet soldiers who died in April 1945 during the liberation of the city at the end of the Second World War. Built between 1957 and 1960, Slavín combines a ceremonial hall with a 39.1-metre obelisk topped by an 11-metre statue of a victorious Soviet soldier holding a flag — an example of socialist-realist "heroic gigantism" designed to make visitors feel very small in front of sacrifice and power.
The complex is laid out as a series of terraces and staircases leading up to the central hall, surrounded by graves whose stones bear the names of fallen soldiers written in Russian. The site sits on a wooded hill above the castle, visible from much of the city below, and local lore says the name Slavín echoes a 19th-century Romantic idea of a mythic resting place for Slavic heroes. During the communist era, every foreign delegation visiting Bratislava was expected to come here and pay their respects, and school groups were brought annually in early April to lay wreaths and recite oaths of friendship with the Soviet Union.
Even after 1989 there were heated debates about whether this very Soviet monument should stay, yet it survived and slowly shifted meaning. Today it is both a reminder of the city's liberation and a quiet hilltop park with some of the best views over Bratislava, where people come to walk dogs, watch sunsets or share a beer on the broad steps when the official ceremonies are over. Every year on 4 April, the anniversary of Bratislava's liberation, politicians, diplomats and veterans still gather here for wreath-laying and speeches, and for a few hours the solemn hall below the obelisk is opened to the public — a recurring ritual that keeps this stone giant woven into the living rhythm of the city this Click captured in late March.
Where: Belfast, Northern Ireland
Feed: Food

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2036889072535560705
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWUb196DoDh
MATTNOTMAX takes us out to one of the many food places in the heart of Belfast. This Click shows a tray of fully loaded curly fries on branded paper from Ragin' Ramen, a Japanese-fusion spot at 24–26 Church Lane in Belfast's Cathedral Quarter, known for ramen bowls with anime names and side dishes like "Tokyo Twisters" and other gloriously pimped-up fries. The toppings match their house style: furikake-style seasoning, teriyaki or soy glaze, nori-or-vegan-mayo drizzle, spring onion, sesame seeds and fresh chilli — the kind of dish locals rave about alongside the in-house broths and cocktails.
Set right in the middle of the Cathedral Quarter, Ragin' Ramen has slipped into Belfast's unofficial rituals: friends meet here before gigs and club nights, office workers slide in for steaming bowls on cold, wet days, and food-obsessed locals argue online about which ramen special — with dishes ranging from the vegan kabocha option to the Sailor Moon Sensation — deserves the crown. In recent years, the city has quietly built a reputation for its Asian food scene, and places like this have become part of the pre-event circuit for the big dates on Belfast's calendar, from St Patrick's weekend to Culture Night, when streets around here fill with buskers, murals, and queues at whichever spot is serving the best loaded fries that evening.
Where: Locmaria-Plouzané, Finistère, France
Feed: Nature

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2036889072535560705
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWXFJw1jmwZ
KRISG1711 invites us to a day at the French coast. This Click was taken on one of the beaches of Locmaria-Plouzané — most likely Plage de Trégana, a south-facing cove on the edge of the Iroise Sea, roughly 15 km west of Brest, known for its fine sand, rocky outcrops and clear water that Breton guides describe as "turquoise on good days". Trégana is one of the stretch's most beloved family beaches, popular with Brest locals who come to swim, surf small waves or launch kayaks and paddleboards as soon as the first mild days of spring arrive — and the scene in this Click, with spring light catching the sand and a yellow shovel resting in the foreground, lands squarely in that hopeful seasonal moment.
The beach sits along the famous GR34, the 1,700-kilometre coastal hiking trail that runs from Mont-Saint-Michel all the way to Saint-Nazaire and traces almost the entire Breton coastline. This path was originally laid out in 1791 as the sentier des douaniers — the customs officers' path — where agents walked the cliffs day and night on the lookout for smugglers working the highly indented Breton shore. Today hikers follow the same clifftop line for sweeping views over the Atlantic, and the scattered rocks offshore that the old customs men once watched for illicit landings show up again in the background of this very Click.
At low tide, families in Finistère keep a long-lived tradition alive: bending over the sand with buckets and small tools to go pêche à pied — shore gathering for clams, winkles and other shellfish. It is a small ritual that repeats with every big tide and turns a simple yellow shovel like the one in this Click into part of a much older Breton story of tides, patience, and the sea feeding whoever takes the time to dig. Recent years have brought a new dimension to that fragility: in 2024, part of the Trégana beach was temporarily closed due to accelerated cliff erosion after severe weather events, a reminder that the coast the douaniers once patrolled is still very much alive, and still very much in motion.
Where: Ilioupoli, Attica, Greece
Feed: Monuments

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2037636468114391247
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWZuihzjkFY
The final Click of this week was captured by KAPA1. This Click was taken over Ilioupoli, a suburb on the southern side of Athens that sits right under one of the approach lines used by the Hellenic Air Force when it rehearses and performs flypasts for national celebrations. The timing lines up exactly with Greece's Independence Day on March 25, when formations of Rafale, F-16 and Mirage jets, along with transport aircraft and helicopters, sweep across the Attica sky as part of the grand military parade in the centre of the city. The 2026 parade was a full spectacle — aircraft types included the Rafale F3R, Mirage 2000-5, F-4E Phantom and C-130 Hercules, among others, with some formations making a second pass over the city.
March 25 carries a double significance for Greeks: it is both the anniversary of the start of the 1821 War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire and the Greek Orthodox Feast of the Annunciation, so the day holds spiritual and national weight in equal measure. The grand military parade begins at 11am from Vasilissis Amalias Avenue, past the Hellenic Parliament, with a 21-gun salute fired from Lycabettus Hill at dawn and the official raising of the Greek flag on the Acropolis at 8am. In the days leading up to the holiday, Athenians know to look up: practice flights roar over neighbourhoods like Ilioupoli and Dafni, and kids spill out onto balconies counting how many aircraft pass in each formation, trying to guess which ones will lead the parade. On the day itself, families time their morning coffee to the sound of the first engines, photographers climb Lycabettus and Philopappou for the classic shot of jets over the Acropolis, and older Athenians quietly remember other eras when hearing fighters overhead meant something much less ceremonial.
The Click captured one of those formations on parade day, arrowing through a gap in the clouds toward the city centre — a fleeting moment that repeats every year, yet never quite feels routine for anyone standing underneath it.
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. From a Jenga tower in a Ho Chi Minh City classroom to jet formations over the Attic sky, from a granite-heavy hilltop in Bratislava to a spring cove on the Finistère coast and a bowl of loaded fries in Belfast's Cathedral Quarter — every single one of these moments is now part of the archive, immutable and exactly as it was. Week after week, our Clickstars show that authenticity is not a filter but a deliberate act, and that once a moment is signed, stored and surfaced as trusted media, even a yellow shovel on a Breton beach or a Jenga block mid-pull 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 travel across five countries and five very different kinds of human experience — a classroom where blocks and laughter hold examination nerves at bay, a hilltop cemetery where granite and silence carry the weight of a city's liberation, a Cathedral Quarter counter stacked with loaded fries and ramen steam, a Breton cove where spring tides and old customs paths converge, and an Attic sky crossed by jet formations on Greece's most celebrated national day. Each of these moments happened, was felt, and is now certifiably real — signed and stored inside the Digital Trust Network exactly as it looked in the split second the shutter dropped.
Settle in and let these five Clicks carry you from Ho Chi Minh City's game-filled classrooms to Bratislava's wind-swept memorial hill, from Belfast's Japanese-fusion haven to a wild Finistère beach where a yellow shovel connects the present to centuries of Breton tide-lore, and finally up into the Attic sky above Ilioupoli, where fighter jets and national pride meet once a year in a roar that never quite grows ordinary.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X, Instagram. 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 283 Clicks, totaling a staggering 73,316 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: Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Feed: General

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2036167415436894677
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWPTlM0jpsX
Back to school on a Monday can be tiring, but recess lifts the mood. This Click shows a group of secondary students in Ho Chi Minh City crowding around a Jenga tower during a break or activity period, a scene that fits well with how many local teachers now mix traditional lessons with games to keep big classes engaged. In public schools here, the academic year is divided into two semesters — Semester I running from September through January and Semester II picking up in mid-January and running through to the end of May — so any moment that turns review into play, like using Jenga blocks for vocabulary or quiz questions, becomes an instant favourite with learners who are usually used to textbook-heavy instruction.
The Click was captured in late March, a time when Semester II is in full swing and students are starting to feel the pressure of assessments that will peak before the May school-year close and, for older students, the high-school graduation tests that follow. Around Ho Chi Minh City there is a small lore among students that the weeks after Tet are the "make-or-break" period of the year: after the nine-day New Year break clubs start up again, teachers ramp up revision games, and classes invent their own recurring traditions — from board-game afternoons to friendly inter-class competitions — to make the climb toward those exams feel a little less like a stack of books and a little more like this Jenga tower: shaky, noisy, but very much shared.
A big thank you to our local Clickstar for sharing this moment with us!
Where: Bratislava, Bratislava, Slovakia
Feed: Monuments

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2036480287043903694
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWRh3sFCJjS
From easy breaks, this Clickstar takes us somewhere considerably more weighty. This Click shows the Slavín memorial, Bratislava's vast hilltop monument and military cemetery dedicated to the 6,845 Soviet soldiers who died in April 1945 during the liberation of the city at the end of the Second World War. Built between 1957 and 1960, Slavín combines a ceremonial hall with a 39.1-metre obelisk topped by an 11-metre statue of a victorious Soviet soldier holding a flag — an example of socialist-realist "heroic gigantism" designed to make visitors feel very small in front of sacrifice and power.
The complex is laid out as a series of terraces and staircases leading up to the central hall, surrounded by graves whose stones bear the names of fallen soldiers written in Russian. The site sits on a wooded hill above the castle, visible from much of the city below, and local lore says the name Slavín echoes a 19th-century Romantic idea of a mythic resting place for Slavic heroes. During the communist era, every foreign delegation visiting Bratislava was expected to come here and pay their respects, and school groups were brought annually in early April to lay wreaths and recite oaths of friendship with the Soviet Union.
Even after 1989 there were heated debates about whether this very Soviet monument should stay, yet it survived and slowly shifted meaning. Today it is both a reminder of the city's liberation and a quiet hilltop park with some of the best views over Bratislava, where people come to walk dogs, watch sunsets or share a beer on the broad steps when the official ceremonies are over. Every year on 4 April, the anniversary of Bratislava's liberation, politicians, diplomats and veterans still gather here for wreath-laying and speeches, and for a few hours the solemn hall below the obelisk is opened to the public — a recurring ritual that keeps this stone giant woven into the living rhythm of the city this Click captured in late March.
Where: Belfast, Northern Ireland
Feed: Food

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2036889072535560705
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWUb196DoDh
MATTNOTMAX takes us out to one of the many food places in the heart of Belfast. This Click shows a tray of fully loaded curly fries on branded paper from Ragin' Ramen, a Japanese-fusion spot at 24–26 Church Lane in Belfast's Cathedral Quarter, known for ramen bowls with anime names and side dishes like "Tokyo Twisters" and other gloriously pimped-up fries. The toppings match their house style: furikake-style seasoning, teriyaki or soy glaze, nori-or-vegan-mayo drizzle, spring onion, sesame seeds and fresh chilli — the kind of dish locals rave about alongside the in-house broths and cocktails.
Set right in the middle of the Cathedral Quarter, Ragin' Ramen has slipped into Belfast's unofficial rituals: friends meet here before gigs and club nights, office workers slide in for steaming bowls on cold, wet days, and food-obsessed locals argue online about which ramen special — with dishes ranging from the vegan kabocha option to the Sailor Moon Sensation — deserves the crown. In recent years, the city has quietly built a reputation for its Asian food scene, and places like this have become part of the pre-event circuit for the big dates on Belfast's calendar, from St Patrick's weekend to Culture Night, when streets around here fill with buskers, murals, and queues at whichever spot is serving the best loaded fries that evening.
Where: Locmaria-Plouzané, Finistère, France
Feed: Nature

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2036889072535560705
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWXFJw1jmwZ
KRISG1711 invites us to a day at the French coast. This Click was taken on one of the beaches of Locmaria-Plouzané — most likely Plage de Trégana, a south-facing cove on the edge of the Iroise Sea, roughly 15 km west of Brest, known for its fine sand, rocky outcrops and clear water that Breton guides describe as "turquoise on good days". Trégana is one of the stretch's most beloved family beaches, popular with Brest locals who come to swim, surf small waves or launch kayaks and paddleboards as soon as the first mild days of spring arrive — and the scene in this Click, with spring light catching the sand and a yellow shovel resting in the foreground, lands squarely in that hopeful seasonal moment.
The beach sits along the famous GR34, the 1,700-kilometre coastal hiking trail that runs from Mont-Saint-Michel all the way to Saint-Nazaire and traces almost the entire Breton coastline. This path was originally laid out in 1791 as the sentier des douaniers — the customs officers' path — where agents walked the cliffs day and night on the lookout for smugglers working the highly indented Breton shore. Today hikers follow the same clifftop line for sweeping views over the Atlantic, and the scattered rocks offshore that the old customs men once watched for illicit landings show up again in the background of this very Click.
At low tide, families in Finistère keep a long-lived tradition alive: bending over the sand with buckets and small tools to go pêche à pied — shore gathering for clams, winkles and other shellfish. It is a small ritual that repeats with every big tide and turns a simple yellow shovel like the one in this Click into part of a much older Breton story of tides, patience, and the sea feeding whoever takes the time to dig. Recent years have brought a new dimension to that fragility: in 2024, part of the Trégana beach was temporarily closed due to accelerated cliff erosion after severe weather events, a reminder that the coast the douaniers once patrolled is still very much alive, and still very much in motion.
Where: Ilioupoli, Attica, Greece
Feed: Monuments

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2037636468114391247
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWZuihzjkFY
The final Click of this week was captured by KAPA1. This Click was taken over Ilioupoli, a suburb on the southern side of Athens that sits right under one of the approach lines used by the Hellenic Air Force when it rehearses and performs flypasts for national celebrations. The timing lines up exactly with Greece's Independence Day on March 25, when formations of Rafale, F-16 and Mirage jets, along with transport aircraft and helicopters, sweep across the Attica sky as part of the grand military parade in the centre of the city. The 2026 parade was a full spectacle — aircraft types included the Rafale F3R, Mirage 2000-5, F-4E Phantom and C-130 Hercules, among others, with some formations making a second pass over the city.
March 25 carries a double significance for Greeks: it is both the anniversary of the start of the 1821 War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire and the Greek Orthodox Feast of the Annunciation, so the day holds spiritual and national weight in equal measure. The grand military parade begins at 11am from Vasilissis Amalias Avenue, past the Hellenic Parliament, with a 21-gun salute fired from Lycabettus Hill at dawn and the official raising of the Greek flag on the Acropolis at 8am. In the days leading up to the holiday, Athenians know to look up: practice flights roar over neighbourhoods like Ilioupoli and Dafni, and kids spill out onto balconies counting how many aircraft pass in each formation, trying to guess which ones will lead the parade. On the day itself, families time their morning coffee to the sound of the first engines, photographers climb Lycabettus and Philopappou for the classic shot of jets over the Acropolis, and older Athenians quietly remember other eras when hearing fighters overhead meant something much less ceremonial.
The Click captured one of those formations on parade day, arrowing through a gap in the clouds toward the city centre — a fleeting moment that repeats every year, yet never quite feels routine for anyone standing underneath it.
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. From a Jenga tower in a Ho Chi Minh City classroom to jet formations over the Attic sky, from a granite-heavy hilltop in Bratislava to a spring cove on the Finistère coast and a bowl of loaded fries in Belfast's Cathedral Quarter — every single one of these moments is now part of the archive, immutable and exactly as it was. Week after week, our Clickstars show that authenticity is not a filter but a deliberate act, and that once a moment is signed, stored and surfaced as trusted media, even a yellow shovel on a Breton beach or a Jenga block mid-pull 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!

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...

Nodle. Click. Agents.
Why decentralized messaging matters more than everIn today’s ever-shifting digital terrain, the struggle for uncensored, verifiable communication is at the heart of personal sovereignty. Nodle has been working on XMTP integration into their apps for months. In June, we released the public beta on iOS, allowing users to connect privately and without a middleman. This experience is now live on Android, enabling our global user base to benefit from private and encrypted chat. This launch of Nodl...

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...

Nodle. Click. Agents.
Why decentralized messaging matters more than everIn today’s ever-shifting digital terrain, the struggle for uncensored, verifiable communication is at the heart of personal sovereignty. Nodle has been working on XMTP integration into their apps for months. In June, we released the public beta on iOS, allowing users to connect privately and without a middleman. This experience is now live on Android, enabling our global user base to benefit from private and encrypted chat. This launch of Nodl...
Nodle connects the world by using smartphones as nodes to create the Digital Trust Network. NODL | https://nodle.com
Nodle connects the world by using smartphones as nodes to create the Digital Trust Network. NODL | https://nodle.com
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