The countries that will benefit most from digital assets will be those that regulate them clearly, fairly and with confidence.
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Top News
Appliance and smart home giant, China’s Haier Group, has officially launched in South Africa.
Microsoft’s AI spending spree and Copilot push are testing investor and user patience after a decade of extraordinary gains.
JSE CIO Tebalo Tsoaeli explains how cloud, regulation and automated trading are reshaping Africa’s largest stock exchange.
More News
AI will affect almost 40% of global jobs, with advanced economies facing greater exposure, according to the IMF.
Bitcoin posted its worst streak in about a month amid ebbing fanfare over new US ETFs.
Multinational MVNO Lyca Mobile has closed its doors locally after six years in the country.
The Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse has said individuals need to be jailed over SAP’s corrupt dealings in South Africa.
Eskom is ramping up load shedding to as high as level 4 this weekend, when energy demand is typically far lower.
The bill seeks to broaden intelligence powers drastically but fails to address longstanding weaknesses in their oversight.
World News
WhatsApp has built a feature called Communities that will allow users to pull together separate groups under a single organisation.
Taiwan’s TSMC forecast an up to 37% jump in current-quarter sales and said it expects chip capacity to remain very tight this year.
Mercedes-Benz aims to produce electric cars consuming as little as 10kWh of energy per 100km, its chief technology officer said.
The moves by regulators threaten Apple’s grip on its platform and potentially limiting its ability to collect a commission from developers.
It’s been 10 years since Apple unleashed a surge of innovation that upended the mobile phone industry. Electric cars, with a little help from ride-hailing and self-driving technology, could be about to pull the same
It was a long wait, but Thursday morning finally looked like the time to congratulate HTC on a smart move. Except I can’t. HTC messed up. Taiwan’s iconic smartphone maker is selling 2 000 of its best and brightest engineers to

































