Former communications minister Dina Pule presided over one of the ICT sector’s darkest chapters.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
Pick n Pay’s asap! app is adding Penny, a Gemini-powered assistant that builds your basket by conversation.
The internet industry has warned that blocking illegal betting sites is easy to dodge, risky and potentially unlawful.
Operators must warn subscribers twice before deactivating a dormant Sim under new Icasa numbering rules.
More News
Eskom has opened the largest battery storage project in Africa, Hex Bess, in the town of Worcester.
Health start-up Kena Health has taken top honours at the 2023 MTN Business App of the Year awards.
ANC SG Fikile Mbalula has reiterated a discredited claim that an $8.8-billion climate finance pact is responsible for load shedding.
Retail group TFG’s online sales now make up almost 10% of its turnover, more than double the market average.
President Cyril Ramaphosa will allocate more powers to Kgosientsho Ramokgopa in an effort to end the power crisis.
MultiChoice will report a loss of about R3.10/share for the six months to end-September, dragged down by forex losses.
World News
PayPal Holdings will allow customers in the UK to buy, sell and hold bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies starting this week, the company said on Monday.
Chinese technology shares rallied in Hong Kong on Monday as bargain hunters pounced in the wake of the sector’s worst rout in months.
Ethiopia has begun developing its own social media platform to rival Facebook, Twitter and WhatsApp, though it does not plan to block the global services.
The Covid-19 vaccine made by Pfizer and BioNTech was granted a full approval by US regulators, a milestone expected to help bolster the immunisation drive.
The amount of electricity generated using solar panels stands to expand as much as sixfold by 2030 as the cost of production falls below competing natural gas and coal-fired plants, according to the International Renewable
Clash of Clans could be the type of tent-pole entertainment that helps Asia’s biggest Internet company build a Marvel-like universe of movies, comic books, online videos and t-shirts. Tencent Holdings, in which South Africa’s Naspers has a
































