The platform buckled before kick-off, leaving soccer fans locked out for much of the first half of the World Cup opener.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
Personal security for CEO Shameel Joosub cost Vodacom about R7.7-million in the 2026 financial year.
The JSE-listed telecommunications group’s annual report, published on Friday, gives no clue as to what it paid Nkosana Makate.
Shoprite couldn’t have planned the Covid-19 pandemic, but what it did to capitalise on it is the real story.
More News
MultiChoice South Africa has announced its price adjustments for 2024, which will take effect on 1 April.
Energy constraints have led to innovations in the local data centre industry.
A presidential commission said the energy ministry has an inadequate plan to tackle the country’s power supply crisis.
Local stock exchanges like the JSE could consider approving the first bitcoin spot ETFs in 2024.
The Democratic Alliance launched its election manifesto at the Union Buildings in Pretoria on Saturday.
Telkom has reported a 2% year-on-year improvement in revenue in the third quarter of its financial year.
World News
Liftoff of Nasa’s James Webb Space Telescope, designed to peer further than ever into the universe, has been delayed until Christmas Day.
Amazon.com, Meta Platforms, Twitter and Pinterest will not send teams to CES in Las Vegas as concerns grow about Omicron, the firms said.
Jack Dorsey has taken to Twitter to voice his displeasure with so-called Web3 technology and the involvement of venture capital firms like Andreessen Horowitz.
China’s biggest live-streaming and e-commerce platforms saw shares drop after the country slapped an unprecedented tax evasion fine on a top influencer.
Children’s ideas about what their gender means for their intellectual capacity are formed before they have even turned six. One idea that’s particularly pervasive and dangerous is that, only boys are good at maths and science. Popular media only exacerbates the
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s manifesto, penned clearly in response to accusations levelled at the social network in the wake of the bitter US election campaign, is a scary, dystopian document. It shows that Facebook – launched, in Zuckerberg’s

































