It wouldn't have been possible to film a sequence quite like this five years ago, the show's cinematographer Matthew Lewis claimed
"Alongside his life partner, Lélia Deluiz Wanick Salgado, he sowed hope where there was devastation and brought to life the belief that environmental restoration is also a profound act of love for humanity."A photographer has spent a decade carrying out "garden safaris" in order to capture the diversity and beauty of Britain's back garden wildlife.
The images, including battling birds and squabbling squirrels, showed just what could be found "under our noses", said Andrew Fusek Peters."I wanted to celebrate the everyday stories and reveal the beauty of our birds, mammals and insects that live alongside us," the Shropshire photographer added.Hundreds of his images feature in a new book.
The majority of the photographs were taken in his "modest" garden, and local village of Lydbury."You don't have to travel to nature reserves or mountains," he said.
"I sometimes get snobbery from the big photographers who go to Africa and do the lions and tigers, or Greenland for the Polar bears," he explained.
"And they think I'm somehow inferior because I do blue tits in the garden."The companies subject to the EU's investigation were designated as very large online platforms under its Digital Services Act (DSA) in 2023.
Under the bloc's sweeping set of digital content rules, they face tougher requirements to tackle harmful and illegal material on the platforms.If suspected infringements of the DSA are confirmed, platforms could face further enforcement actions or, ultimately, a fines of up to 6% of their annual turnover.
The Commission said on Tuesday that Stripchat would no longer be designated a so-called VLOP, but its suspected non-compliance with its digital content rules would still be investigated.Smaller platforms that do not meet the 45m EU user threshold must also abide by the bloc's digital rules to safeguard children, it said.