 If you want to detect and monitor the degradation of forests, map deforestation, and track ecosystem restoration projects and initiatives, you need to know what's happening on the ground, also using satellite imagery. But until recently, it wasn't easy to handle the data. FAO has a new platform that makes it all simpler, SIPL. SIPL is a free and open-source cloud computing platform accessible from any computer, laptop, or smartphone. Connecting with existing sources of satellite imagery or remotely sensed data that previously required a large computer and expensive software licenses to be processed, SIPL allows users to create and analyze data from any place on Earth for free. It can be used to generate and improve land use maps, analyze time series, run detection and perform accuracy assessment, and area assessment. All key tasks in the context of forest protection, sustainable production, and restoration. Developed in collaboration with many, including the World Bank and NASA, and with financial support from the government of Norway, SIPL currently has more than 8,500 users for more than 180 countries, and it's been proving its value. Government agencies, private institutions, NGOs, academics and researchers are all active users of SIPL, but the platform is open to anyone with an entire world of land data just three clicks away.