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  • A new analysis of more than 70,000 wild animal species reveals that climate change is now the third-greatest threat to the planet’s wildlife, following overexploitation and habitat degradation.
  • The study found that nearly 5% of the assessed species are threatened by climate change, with ocean invertebrates being particularly vulnerable to climate change-related threats, such as extreme temperatures, floods, droughts, storms and ocean acidification.
  • The study warns that some animal populations, both on land and at sea, have already begun to collapse due to climate change-related events, and it’s now necessary to monitor mass die-offs to understand the impacts of climate change and predict future impacts.
 
  1. Enable developer mode on your Android phone.
  2. Download Webview Beta/Developer.
  3. Change the webview version you are using to beta from the developer settings.
  4. Install Berry browser for your casual browsing ( configure it at high security and privacy settings).
  5. Install Fulguris browser for the websites that require Low/med privacy and security settings.
  6. Set your default browser as Berry browser.

I thought I share this here for people who like the UI of Firefox but hate it's performance and like chrome performance but hate its UI.

In case you wanted to use any web apps, you can use Native Alpha app.

Please comment if you know of any light(under 20mb) browsers that has good UI, to improve my current setup even further.

 

One of the world’s largest banks threatened to leave the UK if the government increased tax on banks at last year’s autumn budget, openDemocracy can reveal.

The head of US banking giant JP Morgan Chase (JPMC) was among several industry leaders to personally meet with Rachel Reeves last autumn, amid speculation that the chancellor planned to raise tax on banking profits to help fill a £22bn “blackhole” in public finances.

In the end, the tax hike did not materialise. The government has since announced a range of cuts to tackle the funding shortfall, including slashing departmental budgets, disability benefits and the winter fuel allowance for pensioners.

Now, documents obtained by openDemocracy show that a representative of Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMC, wrote to Reeves after the meeting to say the bank would consider moving parts of its business abroad if taxes increased.

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