MTN Group CEO Ralph Mupita will join Paul Kagame, Marc Benioff and Jensen Huang on the global AI commission.
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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.
The South African Bookmakers Association says the debate is no longer whether to act against offshore operators, but when.
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Naspers is backing rent-to-buy car firm Planet42 in a $100-million debt and equity fundraising.
South Africa’s energy supply crisis worsened significantly in 2022 – especially in the second half of the year – and things could get even worse.
Eskom appears to have reached an unprecedented level of power cuts, indicated late on Tuesday by the company spokesman.
Investors in Eskom are on high alert for finance minister Enoch Godongwana’s plan to reorganise its mountain of debt.
Niel Schoeman and Johan “Joe” Pretorius are behind a new digital currency venture hoping to fight climate change.
Sasol anticipates financial as well as environmental benefits from its drive to use renewable energy for its operations, CEO Fleetwood Grobler said on Tuesday.
World News
Players of the popular game Fortnite on iPhones will not get updates after Epic Games on Wednesday decried Apple’s App Store “monopoly” and said it will not remove a direct payment feature it recently enabled.
Facebook has said its apps will no longer collect unique device data from people using Apple’s upcoming iOS 14 operating system, a change that will drastically hinder the social network’s targeted advertising business.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has suggested the electric car maker may be able to mass produce longer-life batteries with 50% more energy density in three to four years.
Apple was spared from having to immediately reinstate Epic Games’ Fortnite on its App Store, an early court victory for the iPhone maker in an intensifying battle over the tolls charged to app makers.
Wi-Fi networks, rather than those operated by mobile communications companies, will eventually be the predominant way that South Africans connect to the Internet, according to Alan Knott-Craig, the
President Jacob Zuma and national assembly speaker Baleka Mbete knew about the security plan ahead of last week’s infamous state of the nation address (Sona) in parliament. They were briefed about protective measures put in place. These measures saw disguised
































