Instagram Logo

climatevisuals

Climate Visuals

Promoting diverse and compelling climate change photography, focusing on people. A Climate Outreach project.

776
posts
1.8K
followers
13.8K
following

New images highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon, or soot, alongside potential solutions to the problem.

Today Climate Visuals, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, has launched over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

Black carbon is one of the world’s super pollutants, alongside methane and tropospheric ozone, that contribute to half of today’s climatic warming.

Particles in the air absorb the sun’s warmth, heating the climate and disrupting local weather patterns. Black carbon smothers the ecosystems that are vital to human and planetary life, and has devastating impacts on communities who are breathing toxic air. It enters bloodstreams and leads to diseases like asthma, strokes, heart attacks, cancer and dementia, as well as low birth weight, stillbirths and miscarriages.

Action on black carbon and other super pollutants can be an ‘emergency brake’ to the climate emergency, with the potential to cut near-term temperatures four times faster than action on carbon dioxide alone. Reducing these dangerous and damaging emissions also delivers a unique triple win: tackling climate change, radically improving health globally and adding trillions to the economy.

The photographs, by Taiwo Aina, Nabin Baral and Esther Sweeney join Victor Moriyama’s work from Brazil in our black carbon collection. The images are available free for non-profit, educational and editorial use, forming a distinct communication resource, helping to tell the story of black carbon, and link its effects on a global climate scale with the impact it has on local communities.

Photo credits:
Nepal - @nabinphotos
Nigeria - @taiwoaina_
Kenya - @sweeney_queen
Brazil - @victormoriyama

Find out more about the project and view the images at the link in our bio!


87
14 hours ago


New images highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon, or soot, alongside potential solutions to the problem.

Today Climate Visuals, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, has launched over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

Black carbon is one of the world’s super pollutants, alongside methane and tropospheric ozone, that contribute to half of today’s climatic warming.

Particles in the air absorb the sun’s warmth, heating the climate and disrupting local weather patterns. Black carbon smothers the ecosystems that are vital to human and planetary life, and has devastating impacts on communities who are breathing toxic air. It enters bloodstreams and leads to diseases like asthma, strokes, heart attacks, cancer and dementia, as well as low birth weight, stillbirths and miscarriages.

Action on black carbon and other super pollutants can be an ‘emergency brake’ to the climate emergency, with the potential to cut near-term temperatures four times faster than action on carbon dioxide alone. Reducing these dangerous and damaging emissions also delivers a unique triple win: tackling climate change, radically improving health globally and adding trillions to the economy.

The photographs, by Taiwo Aina, Nabin Baral and Esther Sweeney join Victor Moriyama’s work from Brazil in our black carbon collection. The images are available free for non-profit, educational and editorial use, forming a distinct communication resource, helping to tell the story of black carbon, and link its effects on a global climate scale with the impact it has on local communities.

Photo credits:
Nepal - @nabinphotos
Nigeria - @taiwoaina_
Kenya - @sweeney_queen
Brazil - @victormoriyama

Find out more about the project and view the images at the link in our bio!


87
14 hours ago

New images highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon, or soot, alongside potential solutions to the problem.

Today Climate Visuals, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, has launched over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

Black carbon is one of the world’s super pollutants, alongside methane and tropospheric ozone, that contribute to half of today’s climatic warming.

Particles in the air absorb the sun’s warmth, heating the climate and disrupting local weather patterns. Black carbon smothers the ecosystems that are vital to human and planetary life, and has devastating impacts on communities who are breathing toxic air. It enters bloodstreams and leads to diseases like asthma, strokes, heart attacks, cancer and dementia, as well as low birth weight, stillbirths and miscarriages.

Action on black carbon and other super pollutants can be an ‘emergency brake’ to the climate emergency, with the potential to cut near-term temperatures four times faster than action on carbon dioxide alone. Reducing these dangerous and damaging emissions also delivers a unique triple win: tackling climate change, radically improving health globally and adding trillions to the economy.

The photographs, by Taiwo Aina, Nabin Baral and Esther Sweeney join Victor Moriyama’s work from Brazil in our black carbon collection. The images are available free for non-profit, educational and editorial use, forming a distinct communication resource, helping to tell the story of black carbon, and link its effects on a global climate scale with the impact it has on local communities.

Photo credits:
Nepal - @nabinphotos
Nigeria - @taiwoaina_
Kenya - @sweeney_queen
Brazil - @victormoriyama

Find out more about the project and view the images at the link in our bio!


87
14 hours ago

New images highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon, or soot, alongside potential solutions to the problem.

Today Climate Visuals, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, has launched over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

Black carbon is one of the world’s super pollutants, alongside methane and tropospheric ozone, that contribute to half of today’s climatic warming.

Particles in the air absorb the sun’s warmth, heating the climate and disrupting local weather patterns. Black carbon smothers the ecosystems that are vital to human and planetary life, and has devastating impacts on communities who are breathing toxic air. It enters bloodstreams and leads to diseases like asthma, strokes, heart attacks, cancer and dementia, as well as low birth weight, stillbirths and miscarriages.

Action on black carbon and other super pollutants can be an ‘emergency brake’ to the climate emergency, with the potential to cut near-term temperatures four times faster than action on carbon dioxide alone. Reducing these dangerous and damaging emissions also delivers a unique triple win: tackling climate change, radically improving health globally and adding trillions to the economy.

The photographs, by Taiwo Aina, Nabin Baral and Esther Sweeney join Victor Moriyama’s work from Brazil in our black carbon collection. The images are available free for non-profit, educational and editorial use, forming a distinct communication resource, helping to tell the story of black carbon, and link its effects on a global climate scale with the impact it has on local communities.

Photo credits:
Nepal - @nabinphotos
Nigeria - @taiwoaina_
Kenya - @sweeney_queen
Brazil - @victormoriyama

Find out more about the project and view the images at the link in our bio!


87
14 hours ago

New images highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon, or soot, alongside potential solutions to the problem.

Today Climate Visuals, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, has launched over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

Black carbon is one of the world’s super pollutants, alongside methane and tropospheric ozone, that contribute to half of today’s climatic warming.

Particles in the air absorb the sun’s warmth, heating the climate and disrupting local weather patterns. Black carbon smothers the ecosystems that are vital to human and planetary life, and has devastating impacts on communities who are breathing toxic air. It enters bloodstreams and leads to diseases like asthma, strokes, heart attacks, cancer and dementia, as well as low birth weight, stillbirths and miscarriages.

Action on black carbon and other super pollutants can be an ‘emergency brake’ to the climate emergency, with the potential to cut near-term temperatures four times faster than action on carbon dioxide alone. Reducing these dangerous and damaging emissions also delivers a unique triple win: tackling climate change, radically improving health globally and adding trillions to the economy.

The photographs, by Taiwo Aina, Nabin Baral and Esther Sweeney join Victor Moriyama’s work from Brazil in our black carbon collection. The images are available free for non-profit, educational and editorial use, forming a distinct communication resource, helping to tell the story of black carbon, and link its effects on a global climate scale with the impact it has on local communities.

Photo credits:
Nepal - @nabinphotos
Nigeria - @taiwoaina_
Kenya - @sweeney_queen
Brazil - @victormoriyama

Find out more about the project and view the images at the link in our bio!


87
14 hours ago

New images highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon, or soot, alongside potential solutions to the problem.

Today Climate Visuals, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, has launched over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

Black carbon is one of the world’s super pollutants, alongside methane and tropospheric ozone, that contribute to half of today’s climatic warming.

Particles in the air absorb the sun’s warmth, heating the climate and disrupting local weather patterns. Black carbon smothers the ecosystems that are vital to human and planetary life, and has devastating impacts on communities who are breathing toxic air. It enters bloodstreams and leads to diseases like asthma, strokes, heart attacks, cancer and dementia, as well as low birth weight, stillbirths and miscarriages.

Action on black carbon and other super pollutants can be an ‘emergency brake’ to the climate emergency, with the potential to cut near-term temperatures four times faster than action on carbon dioxide alone. Reducing these dangerous and damaging emissions also delivers a unique triple win: tackling climate change, radically improving health globally and adding trillions to the economy.

The photographs, by Taiwo Aina, Nabin Baral and Esther Sweeney join Victor Moriyama’s work from Brazil in our black carbon collection. The images are available free for non-profit, educational and editorial use, forming a distinct communication resource, helping to tell the story of black carbon, and link its effects on a global climate scale with the impact it has on local communities.

Photo credits:
Nepal - @nabinphotos
Nigeria - @taiwoaina_
Kenya - @sweeney_queen
Brazil - @victormoriyama

Find out more about the project and view the images at the link in our bio!


87
14 hours ago

New images highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon, or soot, alongside potential solutions to the problem.

Today Climate Visuals, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, has launched over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

Black carbon is one of the world’s super pollutants, alongside methane and tropospheric ozone, that contribute to half of today’s climatic warming.

Particles in the air absorb the sun’s warmth, heating the climate and disrupting local weather patterns. Black carbon smothers the ecosystems that are vital to human and planetary life, and has devastating impacts on communities who are breathing toxic air. It enters bloodstreams and leads to diseases like asthma, strokes, heart attacks, cancer and dementia, as well as low birth weight, stillbirths and miscarriages.

Action on black carbon and other super pollutants can be an ‘emergency brake’ to the climate emergency, with the potential to cut near-term temperatures four times faster than action on carbon dioxide alone. Reducing these dangerous and damaging emissions also delivers a unique triple win: tackling climate change, radically improving health globally and adding trillions to the economy.

The photographs, by Taiwo Aina, Nabin Baral and Esther Sweeney join Victor Moriyama’s work from Brazil in our black carbon collection. The images are available free for non-profit, educational and editorial use, forming a distinct communication resource, helping to tell the story of black carbon, and link its effects on a global climate scale with the impact it has on local communities.

Photo credits:
Nepal - @nabinphotos
Nigeria - @taiwoaina_
Kenya - @sweeney_queen
Brazil - @victormoriyama

Find out more about the project and view the images at the link in our bio!


87
14 hours ago

New images highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon, or soot, alongside potential solutions to the problem.

Today Climate Visuals, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, has launched over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

Black carbon is one of the world’s super pollutants, alongside methane and tropospheric ozone, that contribute to half of today’s climatic warming.

Particles in the air absorb the sun’s warmth, heating the climate and disrupting local weather patterns. Black carbon smothers the ecosystems that are vital to human and planetary life, and has devastating impacts on communities who are breathing toxic air. It enters bloodstreams and leads to diseases like asthma, strokes, heart attacks, cancer and dementia, as well as low birth weight, stillbirths and miscarriages.

Action on black carbon and other super pollutants can be an ‘emergency brake’ to the climate emergency, with the potential to cut near-term temperatures four times faster than action on carbon dioxide alone. Reducing these dangerous and damaging emissions also delivers a unique triple win: tackling climate change, radically improving health globally and adding trillions to the economy.

The photographs, by Taiwo Aina, Nabin Baral and Esther Sweeney join Victor Moriyama’s work from Brazil in our black carbon collection. The images are available free for non-profit, educational and editorial use, forming a distinct communication resource, helping to tell the story of black carbon, and link its effects on a global climate scale with the impact it has on local communities.

Photo credits:
Nepal - @nabinphotos
Nigeria - @taiwoaina_
Kenya - @sweeney_queen
Brazil - @victormoriyama

Find out more about the project and view the images at the link in our bio!


87
14 hours ago


Launching tomorrow!

Tomorrow, in partnership with Clean Air Fund, we're launching over 200 new photographs to our black carbon collection. The images, taken in Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria highlight the causes and impacts of black carbon and are free for non-profit, educational and editorial use. These latest images add to those taken in Brazil, launched late last year.

This photograph, taken by @taiwoaina_ in Nigeria is one of them. It shows Dr Apollos Gogo as he shows soot wiped from a car around industrial gas flare area at Indorama petrochemical company, Oyigbo, Port Harcourt. Rivers State, Nigeria. January 9 2026.

Keep an eye out for the full collection tomorrow!


20
2
1 days ago

How do you photograph heat?

Over the last few days, the UK has already met official heatwave conditions in a number of areas, and the unusually hot weather is set to continue with potentially record breaking temperatures today.

Alongside the hot weather headlines are the familiar images of beach huts, deck chairs, people playing in fountains and the sea or silhouetted with bottles of water and fans, alongside maps shaded an angry red or stock photographs of thermometers.

Whilst we all enjoy warm, sunny weather, extreme heat isn’t fun, and it’s important that images of heat reflect that nuance - and severity. With the mercury rising (as they say in newsprint) photography can be an effective tool to communicate the reality of heat’s effects on people’s lives - yet cliched images of ‘fun in the sun’ miss that opportunity, presenting the hot weather purely as a moment to be enjoyed on holiday, even when this directly contradicts the words the images accompany.

Photographs can also be a useful tool in highlighting how communities are adapting to the effects of extreme heat, and educating and informing viewers in steps they can take in their own lives to adapt.

Working with Climate Resilience for All we have put together some practical tips for visualising extreme heat in a more accurate, nuanced and engaging way. The guidance, relevant for anyone working with imagery of heat and weather, highlights key considerations in 10 key principles - find out more at the link in our bio!

Photo credit: Alastair Johnstone-Hack / Climate Visuals


19
3 days ago

Anthonia Akonasu, 40, a fish seller, smokes fish in her backyard in the Makoko community, a densely populated settlement built on stilts over the Lagos Lagoon.

Married to a fisherman and a mother of six, she has relied on fish smoking as her primary source of income for 14 years. Anthonia says the work provides a sustainable livelihood for her family, despite modest profits. The smoked fish are sold in local markets and exported, with the process carried out over open fires that produce heavy smoke. The process is a significant emitter of black carbon. Lagos, Nigeria. November 1 2025.

These photographs, by @taiwoaina_, are part of a collection highlighting the causes and impacts of black carbon, alongside potential solutions.

Keep an eye out for the launch next week!


269
3
1 weeks ago

Anthonia Akonasu, 40, a fish seller, smokes fish in her backyard in the Makoko community, a densely populated settlement built on stilts over the Lagos Lagoon.

Married to a fisherman and a mother of six, she has relied on fish smoking as her primary source of income for 14 years. Anthonia says the work provides a sustainable livelihood for her family, despite modest profits. The smoked fish are sold in local markets and exported, with the process carried out over open fires that produce heavy smoke. The process is a significant emitter of black carbon. Lagos, Nigeria. November 1 2025.

These photographs, by @taiwoaina_, are part of a collection highlighting the causes and impacts of black carbon, alongside potential solutions.

Keep an eye out for the launch next week!


269
3
1 weeks ago

What does a well-adapted UK look like?

Today, the @climatechangecommitteeuk released their report detailing the climate risks facing the UK and the actions that need to be taken to adapt in the face of them.

Climate Visuals curated a selection of photographs, used throughout the report, to illustrate their findings.

The report highlights the “opportunity to show that government can create change for the better”. Photography has a role to play here too. By revealing what this change looks like in real people’s lives, photographs can build comprehension and understanding and ground abstract terms in real-world experience.

Read more at the link in our bio!


24
1
1 weeks ago

What does a well-adapted UK look like?

Today, the @climatechangecommitteeuk released their report detailing the climate risks facing the UK and the actions that need to be taken to adapt in the face of them.

Climate Visuals curated a selection of photographs, used throughout the report, to illustrate their findings.

The report highlights the “opportunity to show that government can create change for the better”. Photography has a role to play here too. By revealing what this change looks like in real people’s lives, photographs can build comprehension and understanding and ground abstract terms in real-world experience.

Read more at the link in our bio!


24
1
1 weeks ago

What does a well-adapted UK look like?

Today, the @climatechangecommitteeuk released their report detailing the climate risks facing the UK and the actions that need to be taken to adapt in the face of them.

Climate Visuals curated a selection of photographs, used throughout the report, to illustrate their findings.

The report highlights the “opportunity to show that government can create change for the better”. Photography has a role to play here too. By revealing what this change looks like in real people’s lives, photographs can build comprehension and understanding and ground abstract terms in real-world experience.

Read more at the link in our bio!


24
1
1 weeks ago


What does a well-adapted UK look like?

Today, the @climatechangecommitteeuk released their report detailing the climate risks facing the UK and the actions that need to be taken to adapt in the face of them.

Climate Visuals curated a selection of photographs, used throughout the report, to illustrate their findings.

The report highlights the “opportunity to show that government can create change for the better”. Photography has a role to play here too. By revealing what this change looks like in real people’s lives, photographs can build comprehension and understanding and ground abstract terms in real-world experience.

Read more at the link in our bio!


24
1
1 weeks ago

The impacts of illegal oil extraction near K-dere village, in Gokana Local Government Area of Ogoniland.

Rivers State is rich in crude oil resources, and for years both illegal and legal refineries have burned petroleum products, contributing to widespread black carbon pollution across the state. Government interventions have reduced soot levels by an estimated 85 percent, but soot pollution remains a persistent environmental and public health problem in the state. Rivers State, Nigeria. January 7 2026.

This is part of a set of new photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.

Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.

The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.

We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.


24
2 weeks ago

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.

Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.

The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.

We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.


424
11
2 weeks ago

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.

Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.

The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.

We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.


424
11
2 weeks ago

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.

Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.

The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.

We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.


424
11
2 weeks ago

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.

Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.

The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.

We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.


424
11
2 weeks ago


New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.

Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.

The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.

We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.


424
11
2 weeks ago

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.

Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.

The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.

We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.


424
11
2 weeks ago

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.

Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.

The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.

We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.


424
11
2 weeks ago

A deer jumps over rows of straw whilst a combine harvester works in South West England.

Photo credit: Alastair Johnstone-Hack / Climate Visuals


13
1
3 weeks ago

Join Climate Visuals and @coveringclimate for this webinar next week!

Selecting the right visuals is crucial to accurately telling the climate story and engaging audiences. Visuals are journalists’ first chance to hook readers and viewers; they can entice someone to click on a story and engage or to scroll away.

Join Climate Visuals and Covering Climate Now for a special webinar about how to visualise climate change for print and TV. Learn more about visual databases where you can source imagery, with Climate Visuals manager Alastair Johnstone-Hack and @hilary_ogali of Wikimedia. Hear from photographer @justincookphoto about his process for reporting and creating climate visuals, with a focus on solutions. Come with questions!

Sign up at the link in our bio!


16
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds

Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.

Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.

These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.

At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.

Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.


‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026

Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.

Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗

#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice


3
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.

At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.

Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!

Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner


106
1 months ago

With the clown fish population off the coasts of Jakarta shrinking the government has created a hatchery to revive the clown fish population in the wild in order to protect the marine ecology.

Photo credit: @giacomo_dorlando / Climate Visuals


44
1
1 months ago


Voir les histoires Instagram en secret

Le visionneur d’histoires Instagram est un outil simple qui vous permet de regarder et de sauvegarder secrètement les histoires Instagram, vidéos, photos ou IGTV. Avec ce service, vous pouvez télécharger du contenu et l’apprécier hors ligne quand vous voulez. Si vous trouvez quelque chose d’intéressant sur Instagram que vous souhaitez vérifier plus tard ou si vous voulez voir des histoires tout en restant anonyme, notre Visionneur est parfait pour vous. Anonstories offre une excellente solution pour garder votre identité cachée. Instagram a lancé la fonctionnalité Stories en août 2023, rapidement adoptée par d’autres plateformes en raison de son format engageant et temporaire. Les histoires permettent aux utilisateurs de partager des mises à jour rapides, qu’il s’agisse de photos, vidéos ou selfies, agrémentés de texte, emojis ou filtres, visibles pendant 24 heures seulement. Cette fenêtre de temps limitée crée un fort engagement par rapport aux publications régulières. Aujourd’hui, les histoires sont l’un des moyens les plus populaires de se connecter et de communiquer sur les réseaux sociaux. Cependant, lorsque vous regardez une histoire, le créateur peut voir votre nom dans leur liste de visionneurs, ce qui peut poser un problème de confidentialité. Et si vous souhaitez naviguer dans les histoires sans être repéré ? C’est là qu’Anonstories devient utile. Il vous permet de regarder du contenu public sur Instagram sans révéler votre identité. Il vous suffit d’entrer le nom d’utilisateur du profil qui vous intéresse, et l’outil affichera ses dernières histoires. Fonctionnalités du visionneur Anonstories : - Navigation anonyme : Regardez des histoires sans apparaître dans la liste des visionneurs. - Aucun compte requis : Regardez du contenu public sans vous inscrire à un compte Instagram. - Téléchargement de contenu : Sauvegardez directement du contenu d’histoires sur votre appareil pour une utilisation hors ligne. - Voir les highlights : Accédez aux Highlights Instagram, même après la période de 24 heures. - Suivi des reposts : Suivez les reposts ou l’engagement sur les histoires des profils personnels. Limitations : - Cet outil fonctionne uniquement avec les comptes publics ; les comptes privés restent inaccessibles. Avantages : - Respect de la vie privée : Regardez n’importe quel contenu Instagram sans être repéré. - Simple et facile : Aucune installation d’application ni inscription requise. - Outils exclusifs : Téléchargez et gérez du contenu de manière que Instagram ne permet pas.

Avantages d’Anonstories

Explorer les histoires IG discrètement

Suivez les mises à jour Instagram en toute discrétion tout en protégeant votre vie privée et en restant anonyme.


Visionneur privé Instagram

Consultez les profils et photos anonymement avec aisance grâce au visionneur de profil privé.


Visionneur d’histoires gratuit

Ce service gratuit vous permet de voir les histoires Instagram anonymement, garantissant que votre activité reste cachée de l’uploader.

Questions fréquemment posées

 
Anonymat

Anonstories permet aux utilisateurs de voir les histoires Instagram sans alerter le créateur.

 
Compatibilité des appareils

Fonctionne parfaitement sur iOS, Android, Windows, macOS et les navigateurs modernes comme Chrome et Safari.

 
Sécurité et confidentialité

Privilégie la navigation sécurisée et anonyme sans nécessiter de coordonnées de connexion.

 
Pas d’inscription

Les utilisateurs peuvent voir des histoires publiques en entrant simplement un nom d’utilisateur — sans compte requis.

 
Formats pris en charge

Télécharge les photos (JPEG) et les vidéos (MP4) facilement.

 
Coût

Le service est gratuit.

 
Comptes privés

Le contenu des comptes privés n’est accessible qu’aux abonnés.

 
Utilisation des fichiers

Les fichiers sont destinés à un usage personnel ou éducatif uniquement et doivent respecter les règles de droit d’auteur.

 
Comment ça marche

Entrez un nom d’utilisateur public pour voir ou télécharger des histoires. Le service génère des liens directs pour sauvegarder le contenu localement.