The company will begin reopening access after agreeing to work closely with Washington on safety protocols.
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Top News
Emile Burger is stepping down as CEO of Tarsus Distribution. He had been in the role for just 14 months.
Tech billionaires promise AI abundance underwritten by a basic income. Run South Africa’s budget and the thesis unravels.
Former communications minister Dina Pule presided over one of the ICT sector’s darkest chapters.
More News
SuperSport Park, the iconic cricket stadium in Centurion, Pretoria, has implemented an advanced Wi-Fi network.
The Apple iPhone 15 series will be launched on 12 September. This year’s model is likely to offer some big improvements.
A new study from Juniper Research has found losses from global data roaming fraud are anticipated to exceed $8-billion by 2028.
Uber Eats has encouraged drivers not to take unnecessary risks, but to report problems immediately if they feel threatened.
Eskom blamed breakdowns for the escalation in the power cuts, which will be imposed at stage 2 during the day.
Barring a major upset, Amazon will soon launch an e-commerce marketplace in South Africa. What happens when it does?
World News
AT&T, the owner of HBO and Warner Bros studios, and cable and streaming network Discovery plan to combine their media assets to create a standalone global streaming business.
Bitcoin dropped to a three-month low on Monday in the wake of Elon Musk’s hinting over the weekend that Tesla is considering or may have already sold some of its bitcoin holdings.
Spotify Technology CEO Daniel Ek said he made a bid for London’s Arsenal Football Club that was rebuffed by American billionaire Stan Kroenke.
Having earlier said Tesla would accept bitcoin as payment, Elon Musk this week reversed that position, stating cryptocurrencies’ “promising future cannot come at a great cost to the environment”.
The growing pressure on margins as telecommunications moves from a voice-driven industry to one where data is predominant is the main reason South Africa’s incumbent mobile operators are keen for so-called “over the top” providers like WhatsApp and Skype to be
The recent decision by all three telecommunications operators in Morocco to block voice-over-Internet protocol and other IP-based services is the first shot in what is going to
































