The South African Bookmakers Association says the debate is no longer whether to act against offshore operators, but when.
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Zesa says a major electrical fault cut interconnections with neighbouring utilities, collapsing local generation.
Solly Malatsi insists nobody influenced him into pursuing a policy his party, the DA, had already promised.
An investigation has found R2-billion in irregular spending and a quarter of Sita tenders never awarded.
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South Africa and the governments of the Netherlands and Denmark have launched a $1-billion green hydrogen fund.
Vodacom in South Africa will soon offer all customers with supported devices the ability to use embedded Sims.
Canal+ has agreed to buy a significant minority stake in Hong Kong-listed PCCW’s Viu unit.
MultiChoice Group will launch an overhauled version of its streaming platform, Showmax, before the end of the year.
Spotify Technology is planning a more expensive subscription tier that’s expected to include high-fidelity audio.
South Africa’s commercial property industry has the potential to ease the country’s power crisis, a new study has found.
World News
In Christian Klein’s first year as sole CEO at SAP, the company’s shares had their worst performance in 12 years. The pandemic damaged sales. And he lost his co-CEO in a high-profile ouster.
Hong Kong’s equity traders can’t get enough of Tencent Holdings, the $926-billion giant that’s on pace for its biggest ever monthly gain.
Google parent Alphabet is shutting down its Internet balloon business, Loon, which aimed to provide a less expensive alternative to cellphone towers, saying on Thursday that it was not commercially viable.
In the waning days of Donald Trump’s presidency, Jeremy Grantham warned that US stocks were in an epic bubble. He now predicts Joe Biden’s economic recovery plan will propel them to perilous new heights, followed by an inevitable crash.
The arrival of Microsoft Windows 95 on 24 August 1995 brought about a desktop PC boom. With an easier and more intuitive graphical user interface than previous versions, it appealed to more than just business, and Bill Gates’s stated aim of one PC per person per desk was set in
It has been a bad week for companies wanting to build businesses around making money from illegal movie downloaders. Last Friday saw an Australian judge refuse Voltage Pictures the right to send downloaders of Dallas Buyers Club a letter demanding an undisclosed payment. Justice Nye Perram decided that
































