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TIME

News and current events from around the globe. Since 1923.

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As an American soccer prodigy who blazed a path once thought near impossible for a player from the States, Christian Pulisic is already the most influential American men’s soccer player in the country’s 250-year history.

What the introverted forward from Hershey, Pa., lacks in pizzazz, he’s made up for in performance: in 2018 he became the U.S. team’s youngest captain in the modern era, and he’s still the only American man to play in, and win, a Champions League final. But this summer he’ll face his biggest spotlight yet as the U.S. hosts the FIFA World Cup, alongside Canada and Mexico, for the first time in more than three decades.

As the face of Team USA, Pulisic will be everywhere. But he’ll also be carrying the weight of American impatience as soccer fans and pundits demand more. Read about Pulisic’s journey to soccer stardom and what he faces at the link in bio.

Photograph by @alexfwebb for TIME


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A celebrity founder isn’t enough to build a lasting beauty brand. @haileybieber knew that.

Rhode is a success because she’s taken her authentic obsession with skin care, grown an audience around it, and created products that tap into their aesthetic desires—the same desires she and Rhode continually stoke with the aspirational image of her life and the brand.

In Bieber’s own words, she’s “building a world,” rooted in formulation, innovation, packaging, and, most importantly, storytelling. Skin care is a true obsession of Bieber’s, she can talk your ear off about ingredients and the latest scientific advancements. But with Rhode, she wanted to keep things simple, developing the brand’s mantra of “one of everything really good.”

That focus paid off. Rhode has grown quickly, landing in Sephora and striking a deal with e.l.f. Beauty worth $1 billion, giving the brand the infrastructure to expand worldwide.
That success has earned Rhode a spot on TIME’s 100 most influential companies of the year.Read more of Bieber’s profile at the link in bio.

Photograph by @kanyaiwana for TIME


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Alphabet is one of TIME’s most influential companies of the year, with CEO Sundar Pichai at the helm.

Pichai’s low-key style has led critics to underestimate him. While analysts called for his resignation, Pichai remained calm; he had been lying in wait for this moment for a decade. In 2016, he had declared Google would be an “AI-first company,” and began cultivating a series of projects—custom chips, Cloud, YouTube, and deep AI research—that seemed to have nothing to do with Google’s core search product.

All of these bets have paid off, and then some. Google DeepMind forged several key breakthroughs that catapulted Google’s Gemini model to the top of many capability leaderboards. Gemini now accounts for a quarter of AI traffic worldwide, up from 6% a year ago, according to Similarweb. Google has quietly introduced millions of people to AI through everyday products. All these successes mean the main criticism Pichai faces is no longer about his leadership, but rather whether Google has once again become too powerful for society’s good. Read more about Pichai’s leadership at the link in bio.

Photograph by @danieldorsa for TIME


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Few writers are as candid about their influences as @lenadunham. In the wake of the release of her new memoir ‘Famesick,’ we asked the author and ‘Girls’ creator which books have shaped her, and what she thinks every woman should be reading right now.

Who should we interview next for our book recommendation series? Tag them below.

Location📍@192books
Host: @lucyfeld
Producer: @alenkacc


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Deployed and reclaimed just right, researchers found that urban gardens could meet up to 28% of the fruit and vegetable demands of 190 million people across the continent of Europe.

Read more about this study at the link in bio.


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Deployed and reclaimed just right, researchers found that urban gardens could meet up to 28% of the fruit and vegetable demands of 190 million people across the continent of Europe.

Read more about this study at the link in bio.


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Deployed and reclaimed just right, researchers found that urban gardens could meet up to 28% of the fruit and vegetable demands of 190 million people across the continent of Europe.

Read more about this study at the link in bio.


1.1K
7
8 hours ago

'The Handmaid’s Tale,' Hulu’s six-season TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed 1985 novel, was an emblem of anti-Donald Trump resistance during his first presidential administration. As for what its sequel series, 'The Testaments,' loosely based on Atwood’s 2019 best-seller of the same name, will represent for audiences during Trump’s second term, “that’s not up to me,” the 86-year-old author tells TIME. “Readers and viewers will make up their own minds about what it represents.”

'The Testaments' TV show puts a YA spin on the young women’s sphere of this hyperpatriarchal society. Atwood discusses the show's themes of rebellion, what it says about tradwives, and more at the link in bio.

Photographs by Monica Morgan—Getty Images; Steve Wilkie—Disney (2); Russ Martin—Disney


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'The Handmaid’s Tale,' Hulu’s six-season TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed 1985 novel, was an emblem of anti-Donald Trump resistance during his first presidential administration. As for what its sequel series, 'The Testaments,' loosely based on Atwood’s 2019 best-seller of the same name, will represent for audiences during Trump’s second term, “that’s not up to me,” the 86-year-old author tells TIME. “Readers and viewers will make up their own minds about what it represents.”

'The Testaments' TV show puts a YA spin on the young women’s sphere of this hyperpatriarchal society. Atwood discusses the show's themes of rebellion, what it says about tradwives, and more at the link in bio.

Photographs by Monica Morgan—Getty Images; Steve Wilkie—Disney (2); Russ Martin—Disney


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'The Handmaid’s Tale,' Hulu’s six-season TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed 1985 novel, was an emblem of anti-Donald Trump resistance during his first presidential administration. As for what its sequel series, 'The Testaments,' loosely based on Atwood’s 2019 best-seller of the same name, will represent for audiences during Trump’s second term, “that’s not up to me,” the 86-year-old author tells TIME. “Readers and viewers will make up their own minds about what it represents.”

'The Testaments' TV show puts a YA spin on the young women’s sphere of this hyperpatriarchal society. Atwood discusses the show's themes of rebellion, what it says about tradwives, and more at the link in bio.

Photographs by Monica Morgan—Getty Images; Steve Wilkie—Disney (2); Russ Martin—Disney


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15 hours ago

'The Handmaid’s Tale,' Hulu’s six-season TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed 1985 novel, was an emblem of anti-Donald Trump resistance during his first presidential administration. As for what its sequel series, 'The Testaments,' loosely based on Atwood’s 2019 best-seller of the same name, will represent for audiences during Trump’s second term, “that’s not up to me,” the 86-year-old author tells TIME. “Readers and viewers will make up their own minds about what it represents.”

'The Testaments' TV show puts a YA spin on the young women’s sphere of this hyperpatriarchal society. Atwood discusses the show's themes of rebellion, what it says about tradwives, and more at the link in bio.

Photographs by Monica Morgan—Getty Images; Steve Wilkie—Disney (2); Russ Martin—Disney


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15 hours ago

'The Handmaid’s Tale,' Hulu’s six-season TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed 1985 novel, was an emblem of anti-Donald Trump resistance during his first presidential administration. As for what its sequel series, 'The Testaments,' loosely based on Atwood’s 2019 best-seller of the same name, will represent for audiences during Trump’s second term, “that’s not up to me,” the 86-year-old author tells TIME. “Readers and viewers will make up their own minds about what it represents.”

'The Testaments' TV show puts a YA spin on the young women’s sphere of this hyperpatriarchal society. Atwood discusses the show's themes of rebellion, what it says about tradwives, and more at the link in bio.

Photographs by Monica Morgan—Getty Images; Steve Wilkie—Disney (2); Russ Martin—Disney


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20
15 hours ago

'The Handmaid’s Tale,' Hulu’s six-season TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed 1985 novel, was an emblem of anti-Donald Trump resistance during his first presidential administration. As for what its sequel series, 'The Testaments,' loosely based on Atwood’s 2019 best-seller of the same name, will represent for audiences during Trump’s second term, “that’s not up to me,” the 86-year-old author tells TIME. “Readers and viewers will make up their own minds about what it represents.”

'The Testaments' TV show puts a YA spin on the young women’s sphere of this hyperpatriarchal society. Atwood discusses the show's themes of rebellion, what it says about tradwives, and more at the link in bio.

Photographs by Monica Morgan—Getty Images; Steve Wilkie—Disney (2); Russ Martin—Disney


2K
20
15 hours ago

'The Handmaid’s Tale,' Hulu’s six-season TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed 1985 novel, was an emblem of anti-Donald Trump resistance during his first presidential administration. As for what its sequel series, 'The Testaments,' loosely based on Atwood’s 2019 best-seller of the same name, will represent for audiences during Trump’s second term, “that’s not up to me,” the 86-year-old author tells TIME. “Readers and viewers will make up their own minds about what it represents.”

'The Testaments' TV show puts a YA spin on the young women’s sphere of this hyperpatriarchal society. Atwood discusses the show's themes of rebellion, what it says about tradwives, and more at the link in bio.

Photographs by Monica Morgan—Getty Images; Steve Wilkie—Disney (2); Russ Martin—Disney


2K
20
15 hours ago

'The Handmaid’s Tale,' Hulu’s six-season TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed 1985 novel, was an emblem of anti-Donald Trump resistance during his first presidential administration. As for what its sequel series, 'The Testaments,' loosely based on Atwood’s 2019 best-seller of the same name, will represent for audiences during Trump’s second term, “that’s not up to me,” the 86-year-old author tells TIME. “Readers and viewers will make up their own minds about what it represents.”

'The Testaments' TV show puts a YA spin on the young women’s sphere of this hyperpatriarchal society. Atwood discusses the show's themes of rebellion, what it says about tradwives, and more at the link in bio.

Photographs by Monica Morgan—Getty Images; Steve Wilkie—Disney (2); Russ Martin—Disney


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Who influencers your favorite influencers?

On the TIME100 Gala red carpet last month, @cyrusveyssi and @haleyybaylee had the same answer: their mothers. (Even if they don't totally understand what they do... relatable). 💝


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Television has given us some of the wisest, wackiest, and most beloved mothers we've ever known.

From Marge Simpson to Moira Rose, these TV matriarchs brought varied and often hilarious approaches to parenting and life that still resonate with audiences today.

Photographs by Steve Wilkie—CBC/POP/Courtesy Everett, Danny Feld—Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett, Chris Cuffaio—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images, Gavin Bond—20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett, Fox/Courtesy Everett, Ron Tom—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images


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1 days ago

Television has given us some of the wisest, wackiest, and most beloved mothers we've ever known.

From Marge Simpson to Moira Rose, these TV matriarchs brought varied and often hilarious approaches to parenting and life that still resonate with audiences today.

Photographs by Steve Wilkie—CBC/POP/Courtesy Everett, Danny Feld—Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett, Chris Cuffaio—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images, Gavin Bond—20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett, Fox/Courtesy Everett, Ron Tom—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images


14K
169
1 days ago

Television has given us some of the wisest, wackiest, and most beloved mothers we've ever known.

From Marge Simpson to Moira Rose, these TV matriarchs brought varied and often hilarious approaches to parenting and life that still resonate with audiences today.

Photographs by Steve Wilkie—CBC/POP/Courtesy Everett, Danny Feld—Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett, Chris Cuffaio—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images, Gavin Bond—20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett, Fox/Courtesy Everett, Ron Tom—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images


14K
169
1 days ago

Television has given us some of the wisest, wackiest, and most beloved mothers we've ever known.

From Marge Simpson to Moira Rose, these TV matriarchs brought varied and often hilarious approaches to parenting and life that still resonate with audiences today.

Photographs by Steve Wilkie—CBC/POP/Courtesy Everett, Danny Feld—Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett, Chris Cuffaio—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images, Gavin Bond—20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett, Fox/Courtesy Everett, Ron Tom—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images


14K
169
1 days ago

Television has given us some of the wisest, wackiest, and most beloved mothers we've ever known.

From Marge Simpson to Moira Rose, these TV matriarchs brought varied and often hilarious approaches to parenting and life that still resonate with audiences today.

Photographs by Steve Wilkie—CBC/POP/Courtesy Everett, Danny Feld—Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett, Chris Cuffaio—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images, Gavin Bond—20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett, Fox/Courtesy Everett, Ron Tom—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images


14K
169
1 days ago


Television has given us some of the wisest, wackiest, and most beloved mothers we've ever known.

From Marge Simpson to Moira Rose, these TV matriarchs brought varied and often hilarious approaches to parenting and life that still resonate with audiences today.

Photographs by Steve Wilkie—CBC/POP/Courtesy Everett, Danny Feld—Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett, Chris Cuffaio—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images, Gavin Bond—20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett, Fox/Courtesy Everett, Ron Tom—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images


14K
169
1 days ago

Television has given us some of the wisest, wackiest, and most beloved mothers we've ever known.

From Marge Simpson to Moira Rose, these TV matriarchs brought varied and often hilarious approaches to parenting and life that still resonate with audiences today.

Photographs by Steve Wilkie—CBC/POP/Courtesy Everett, Danny Feld—Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett, Chris Cuffaio—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images, Gavin Bond—20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett, Fox/Courtesy Everett, Ron Tom—NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images


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“That’s so morbid!”

In 2025, a longtime client of Ilana Grines, a therapist in Los Angeles, found out that his mother had terminal cancer. Grines gave him an assignment: Write down everything you want to tell her while you still can. The man took the idea back to his friends, who were appalled. He told them he was going to do it anyway.

When the two regrouped after his mom’s death, he was in tears. “He said to me, ‘I’m so thankful we did this, because I don't feel like there's anything left unsaid,’” says Grines. “We tend to operate under the idea that we have an infinite amount of time with our parents and that we can say whatever we want to them whenever, but the reality is that we don’t.”

That’s why Grines and other experts recommend seizing any opportunity—whether it’s Mother’s Day, her birthday, or a random Tuesday afternoon—to express the specific things you admire and appreciate about your mom. “Waiting to say these things is going to cost you something later,” she says. “It’s the best gift you can give yourself and your mom.” Here are just a few things you can say; find more at the link in bio.

Credit: Photo-Illustration by TIME (Source Image: Drazen_/Getty Images)


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1 days ago

“That’s so morbid!”

In 2025, a longtime client of Ilana Grines, a therapist in Los Angeles, found out that his mother had terminal cancer. Grines gave him an assignment: Write down everything you want to tell her while you still can. The man took the idea back to his friends, who were appalled. He told them he was going to do it anyway.

When the two regrouped after his mom’s death, he was in tears. “He said to me, ‘I’m so thankful we did this, because I don't feel like there's anything left unsaid,’” says Grines. “We tend to operate under the idea that we have an infinite amount of time with our parents and that we can say whatever we want to them whenever, but the reality is that we don’t.”

That’s why Grines and other experts recommend seizing any opportunity—whether it’s Mother’s Day, her birthday, or a random Tuesday afternoon—to express the specific things you admire and appreciate about your mom. “Waiting to say these things is going to cost you something later,” she says. “It’s the best gift you can give yourself and your mom.” Here are just a few things you can say; find more at the link in bio.

Credit: Photo-Illustration by TIME (Source Image: Drazen_/Getty Images)


9.2K
53
1 days ago

“That’s so morbid!”

In 2025, a longtime client of Ilana Grines, a therapist in Los Angeles, found out that his mother had terminal cancer. Grines gave him an assignment: Write down everything you want to tell her while you still can. The man took the idea back to his friends, who were appalled. He told them he was going to do it anyway.

When the two regrouped after his mom’s death, he was in tears. “He said to me, ‘I’m so thankful we did this, because I don't feel like there's anything left unsaid,’” says Grines. “We tend to operate under the idea that we have an infinite amount of time with our parents and that we can say whatever we want to them whenever, but the reality is that we don’t.”

That’s why Grines and other experts recommend seizing any opportunity—whether it’s Mother’s Day, her birthday, or a random Tuesday afternoon—to express the specific things you admire and appreciate about your mom. “Waiting to say these things is going to cost you something later,” she says. “It’s the best gift you can give yourself and your mom.” Here are just a few things you can say; find more at the link in bio.

Credit: Photo-Illustration by TIME (Source Image: Drazen_/Getty Images)


9.2K
53
1 days ago

“That’s so morbid!”

In 2025, a longtime client of Ilana Grines, a therapist in Los Angeles, found out that his mother had terminal cancer. Grines gave him an assignment: Write down everything you want to tell her while you still can. The man took the idea back to his friends, who were appalled. He told them he was going to do it anyway.

When the two regrouped after his mom’s death, he was in tears. “He said to me, ‘I’m so thankful we did this, because I don't feel like there's anything left unsaid,’” says Grines. “We tend to operate under the idea that we have an infinite amount of time with our parents and that we can say whatever we want to them whenever, but the reality is that we don’t.”

That’s why Grines and other experts recommend seizing any opportunity—whether it’s Mother’s Day, her birthday, or a random Tuesday afternoon—to express the specific things you admire and appreciate about your mom. “Waiting to say these things is going to cost you something later,” she says. “It’s the best gift you can give yourself and your mom.” Here are just a few things you can say; find more at the link in bio.

Credit: Photo-Illustration by TIME (Source Image: Drazen_/Getty Images)


9.2K
53
1 days ago

“That’s so morbid!”

In 2025, a longtime client of Ilana Grines, a therapist in Los Angeles, found out that his mother had terminal cancer. Grines gave him an assignment: Write down everything you want to tell her while you still can. The man took the idea back to his friends, who were appalled. He told them he was going to do it anyway.

When the two regrouped after his mom’s death, he was in tears. “He said to me, ‘I’m so thankful we did this, because I don't feel like there's anything left unsaid,’” says Grines. “We tend to operate under the idea that we have an infinite amount of time with our parents and that we can say whatever we want to them whenever, but the reality is that we don’t.”

That’s why Grines and other experts recommend seizing any opportunity—whether it’s Mother’s Day, her birthday, or a random Tuesday afternoon—to express the specific things you admire and appreciate about your mom. “Waiting to say these things is going to cost you something later,” she says. “It’s the best gift you can give yourself and your mom.” Here are just a few things you can say; find more at the link in bio.

Credit: Photo-Illustration by TIME (Source Image: Drazen_/Getty Images)


9.2K
53
1 days ago

“That’s so morbid!”

In 2025, a longtime client of Ilana Grines, a therapist in Los Angeles, found out that his mother had terminal cancer. Grines gave him an assignment: Write down everything you want to tell her while you still can. The man took the idea back to his friends, who were appalled. He told them he was going to do it anyway.

When the two regrouped after his mom’s death, he was in tears. “He said to me, ‘I’m so thankful we did this, because I don't feel like there's anything left unsaid,’” says Grines. “We tend to operate under the idea that we have an infinite amount of time with our parents and that we can say whatever we want to them whenever, but the reality is that we don’t.”

That’s why Grines and other experts recommend seizing any opportunity—whether it’s Mother’s Day, her birthday, or a random Tuesday afternoon—to express the specific things you admire and appreciate about your mom. “Waiting to say these things is going to cost you something later,” she says. “It’s the best gift you can give yourself and your mom.” Here are just a few things you can say; find more at the link in bio.

Credit: Photo-Illustration by TIME (Source Image: Drazen_/Getty Images)


9.2K
53
1 days ago

The cultural ideal of a cohesive friend group may be harder to sustain than we imagine. Instead, humans are wired for one-on-one, or dyad, friendships.

Tap the link in bio to read more, via @time.

Photos: Getty Images


10.4K
144
2 days ago

The cultural ideal of a cohesive friend group may be harder to sustain than we imagine. Instead, humans are wired for one-on-one, or dyad, friendships.

Tap the link in bio to read more, via @time.

Photos: Getty Images


10.4K
144
2 days ago

The cultural ideal of a cohesive friend group may be harder to sustain than we imagine. Instead, humans are wired for one-on-one, or dyad, friendships.

Tap the link in bio to read more, via @time.

Photos: Getty Images


10.4K
144
2 days ago

The cultural ideal of a cohesive friend group may be harder to sustain than we imagine. Instead, humans are wired for one-on-one, or dyad, friendships.

Tap the link in bio to read more, via @time.

Photos: Getty Images


10.4K
144
2 days ago

The cultural ideal of a cohesive friend group may be harder to sustain than we imagine. Instead, humans are wired for one-on-one, or dyad, friendships.

Tap the link in bio to read more, via @time.

Photos: Getty Images


10.4K
144
2 days ago

'The Devil Wears Prada 2' is darker than its predecessor, and it actually makes it better. That’s according to TIME's film critic Stephanie Zacharek.

The landscape of magazines in particular is much rockier and more barren than it was in 2006, the year ‘The Devil Wears Prada,’ a picture that mercilessly mocked Wintour and her ilk, was released. The sequel shows the print industry for what it is: in turmoil. Here is what we liked about it and what surprised us about the characters' fashion choices.

Cover photograph by Macall Polay—20th Century Studios


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2 days ago

“I hope we can make you proud.”

American soccer player Christian Pulisic speaks on playing a World Cup on home soil, and why you should watch the games. Read the full profile of America’s standout soccer star at the link in bio.

Photograph by @alexfwebb for TIME


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2 days ago


Veja Stories do Instagram Secretamente

O Visualizador de Stories do Instagram é uma ferramenta fácil que permite assistir e salvar stories, vídeos, fotos ou IGTV do Instagram secretamente. Com este serviço, você pode baixar conteúdos e apreciá-los offline sempre que quiser. Se você encontrar algo interessante no Instagram que gostaria de ver mais tarde ou quiser visualizar stories de forma anônima, nosso Visualizador é perfeito para você. Anonstories oferece uma excelente solução para manter sua identidade oculta. O Instagram lançou a funcionalidade de Stories em agosto de 2023, que logo foi adotada por outras plataformas devido ao seu formato dinâmico e sensível ao tempo. Os Stories permitem que os usuários compartilhem atualizações rápidas, sejam fotos, vídeos ou selfies, com textos, emojis ou filtros, e ficam visíveis por apenas 24 horas. Esse limite de tempo cria maior engajamento em comparação com posts comuns. Nos dias de hoje, os Stories são uma das formas mais populares de se conectar e comunicar nas redes sociais. No entanto, quando você visualiza um Story, o criador pode ver seu nome na lista de visualizadores, o que pode ser uma preocupação com a privacidade. E se você quiser navegar pelos Stories sem ser notado? É aí que o Anonstories se torna útil. Ele permite que você assista a conteúdos públicos do Instagram sem revelar sua identidade. Basta digitar o nome de usuário do perfil que você está curioso, e a ferramenta mostrará seus Stories mais recentes. Funcionalidades do Visualizador Anonstories: - Navegação Anônima: Veja Stories sem aparecer na lista de visualizadores. - Sem Conta Necessária: Veja conteúdos públicos sem se cadastrar no Instagram. - Download de Conteúdos: Salve qualquer conteúdo de Stories diretamente no seu dispositivo para uso offline. - Veja Destaques: Acesse os Destaques do Instagram, até mesmo após o prazo de 24 horas. - Monitoramento de Reposts: Acompanhe os reposts ou o nível de engajamento em Stories de perfis pessoais. Limitações: - Esta ferramenta funciona apenas com contas públicas; contas privadas permanecem inacessíveis. Benefícios: - Amigável à Privacidade: Veja qualquer conteúdo do Instagram sem ser notado. - Simples e Fácil: Não há necessidade de instalação de aplicativo ou registro. - Ferramentas Exclusivas: Baixe e gerencie conteúdos de maneiras que o Instagram não oferece.

Vantagens do Anonstories

Explore Stories do IG Privadamente

Acompanhe as atualizações do Instagram de forma discreta, protegendo sua privacidade e permanecendo anônimo.


Visualizador Privado do Instagram

Veja perfis e fotos anonimamente com facilidade usando o Visualizador de Perfil Privado.


Visualizador de Stories Gratuito

Esta ferramenta gratuita permite que você veja Stories do Instagram anonimamente, garantindo que sua atividade permaneça oculta do criador do story.

Perguntas Frequentes

 
Anonimato

Anonstories permite que os usuários vejam stories do Instagram sem alertar o criador.

 
Compatibilidade com Dispositivos

Funciona perfeitamente em iOS, Android, Windows, macOS e navegadores modernos como Chrome e Safari.

 
Segurança e Privacidade

Prioriza navegação segura e anônima, sem necessidade de credenciais de login.

 
Sem Registro

Os usuários podem visualizar stories públicos digitando apenas o nome de usuário—sem precisar de uma conta.

 
Formatos Suportados

Baixa fotos (JPEG) e vídeos (MP4) com facilidade.

 
Custo

O serviço é gratuito.

 
Contas Privadas

Conteúdos de contas privadas só podem ser acessados por seguidores.

 
Uso de Arquivos

Os arquivos são para uso pessoal ou educacional, conforme as regras de direitos autorais.

 
Como Funciona

Digite um nome de usuário público para ver ou baixar stories. O serviço gera links diretos para salvar o conteúdo localmente.