South Africa’s AI policy will be rewritten. The threat won’t wait, writes Palo Alto Networks’ Justin Lee.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
Longer contracts have become South Africa’s answer to unaffordable smartphones – but at a big long-term cost to consumers.
Co-founders Bradley Wattrus and Lungisa Matshoba will return to CFO and chief product and technology roles.
TrendAI’s Zaheer Ebrahim says South Africa’s patching problem is about to be compounded by agentic AI.
More News
Telkom on Monday published its financial results for the three months ended 31 December 2024 – and they’re good.
MTN still has the fastest mobile network overall in South Africa, though Vodacom has overtaken its rival in 5G speeds.
OpenAI is pushing ahead with a plan to reduce its reliance on Nvidia by developing its first in-house AI silicon.
T-Mobile US’s tie-up with Starlink for satellite texting and data usage will cost customers the equivalent of R278/month.
Salesforce director of solution engineering for Africa Linda Saunders has been promoted to country manager for South Africa.
Elon Musk said he’s not interested in purchasing TikTok, the popular video app that the US has been trying to ban.
World News
Elon Musk said that he bought Twitter because the social network was having a “corrosive effect” on society that he hoped to improve.
A Twitter video app for smart TVs is in the social media company’s plans, owner Elon Musk said.
The outages that affected certain Microsoft services were the result of cyberattacks.
US chip maker Intel will spend $25-billion on a new fabrication plant in Israel.
Custom-tailored capitalism is what has made Google, Facebook, Amazon and others the richest companies in the world. But this business model has enormous potential to violate civil liberties.
The smart money is still on Europe taking the more adventurous and aggressive antitrust measures. But there’s no ignoring the shift on both sides of the Atlantic.
































