Naspers and Prosus chairman Koos Bekker has sold shares in both companies worth about R2.5-billion over three trading days.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
Top News
Groupe Canal+ and Warner Bros Discovery have struck a last-minute agreement to keep channels like CNN on DStv.
The rand ended 2025 nearly 13% stronger against the US dollar, marking its biggest annual gain in 16 years.
Louis Gerstner, the former CEO and chairman of IBM, died on Saturday, aged 83.
More News
Apple fans, take note: iStore has announced South African pricing for the new M2 Apple silicon-powered MacBook Air.
South Africa’s headline consumer inflation quickened more than forecast to 7.4% year on year in June, surging to a 13-year high.
A passion among friends for betting on sports events has led to the creation of a new South African start-up that’s wagering that the future of betting lies in peer-to-peer technology.
A billionaire signed on to buy a company and then regretted it when the market moved against him. That doesn’t give him the right to just walk away.
The Special Investigating Unit has instituted civil proceedings to set aside and review a R215-million IT tender awarded by the Moretele municipality.
Strive Masiyiwa plans to raise as much as $500-million to expand his digital infrastructure and services businesses.
World News
Washington’s plan to ban certain technologies of Chinese origin is a sign of “madness” in US secretary of state Mike Pompeo, China’s state-backed tabloid Global Times wrote in an editorial on Thursday.
The Trump administration’s move to ban US residents from doing business with Tencent’s WeChat app rippled through Chinese markets, erasing $46-billion from the Internet giant’s market value.
Facebook on Wednesday for the first time took down a post by US President Donald Trump, which the company said violated its rules against sharing misinformation about the coronavirus.
The Trump administration said on Wednesday it was stepping up efforts to purge “untrusted” Chinese apps from US digital networks and called TikTok and WeChat “significant threats”.
Technology group Pinnacle Holdings will focus on bedding down its African expansion and focusing on company operations as a strategy to rebuild shareholder confidence. Pinnacle CEO Arnold Fourie says
Nokia, Motorola, Sony Ericsson and BlackBerry were all victims of disruption. During the 1990s and 2000s, they shepherded the cellphone during its period of take-off into ubiquity. Then in the last five years, they all lost their leadership positions and are now on the


































