The combined market value Naspers and Prosus CEO Fabricio Bloisi must double to earn the award has slipped over the year.
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The regulator says it cannot issue new network licences for now, pointing operators towards buying existing ones.
Comcast plans to split into two companies through a spinoff of Sky and former Showmax shareholder NBCUniversal.
South Africa’s automotive body insists local car output still leads the continent, even as the country’s electric ambitions lag.
More News
Bitcoin has rallied to an almost 18-month high on speculation that a bitcoin ETF is imminent.
Major brands are warning that “artificially inflated traffic” fraud is making SMS “a damaged channel”.
The Public Servants Association has given its members until Tuesday to decide on Sita’s latest wage offer.
MultiChoice Group-owned Irdeto has won another battle in its war against piracy.
There’s no need to turn our geysers off. Instead, South Africa should be driving the adoption of smart geysers.
South Africa is beginning to turn the corner in resolving load shedding, the electricity minister has said.
World News
Square, the payments firm of Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, will purchase “buy now, pay later” pioneer Afterpay for $29-billion, creating a global transactions giant.
Shares of Pinterest fell about 20% in pre-market trading on Friday after the company warned of slowing user growth in the US, its largest market.
Google has asked a judge hearing the US justice department’s antitrust lawsuit against the search giant to compel Microsoft to turn over documents, saying it has failed to comply with a subpoena.
Elon Musk’s brain-chip start-up, Neuralink, has raised US$205-million in a funding round led by Dubai-based venture capital firm Vy Capital, with participation from Google Ventures.
After a rocky start, commercial free-to-air satellite broadcaster OpenView HD, a sister company of e.tv, is adding subscribers at a remarkable rate of knots, though revenues are proving elusive. Listed parent company eMedia Holdings revealed in its annual results
Three hours, around 100 people, 1 400 Japanese ATMs and 1 600 counterfeit credit cards, was all it took for fraudsters to exploit Standard Bank in Japan. The bank, which stands to lose up to R300m, described the attack as a “sophisticated
































