Legislative changes and lower-cost infrastructure are driving the advance of cryptocurrencies into mainstream payments.
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Electricity market liberalisation, new trading rules and grid reform will define renewable energy progress in 2026.
South Africa’s latest trial of digital sound broadcasting – using DRM technology – is set to be launched next month.
The EU has formally rejected a proposal from operators that big tech companies should help pay for infrastructure.
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The department of home affairs said on Friday that its systems are offline nationwide, limiting its ability to serve the public.
Cabinet has announced that South Africa will not migrate from analogue to digital terrestrial television until 2037 – at the earliest.
Vodacom South Africa MD Balesh Sharma is leaving the mobile operator after less than two years in the role to pursue a new opportunity in Europe.
EOH Holdings shares climbed 9.4% on Thursday after it provided an upbeat assessment of its turnaround plan and pointed to improved financial results.
South Africa’s plan to add an estimated R95-billion worth of private emergency power generation has been further delayed.
A new platform has been created to help South African artists keep track of their airplay and the proceeds due to them.
World News
Network providers must ensure cost is not preventing people from accessing critical information online, the World Wide Web Foundation has warned.
WeWork says it doesn’t expect to hit its 2020 financial targets as it grapples with the coronavirus outbreak.
These days, with the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic wreaking havoc on economic and business projections, a company can stand out just by maintaining its outlook.
First it was the Olympics, and now this! Apple might delay the release of its upcoming 5G iPhone by several months because of the Covid-19 pandemic, Nikkei reported on Thursday.
Icasa has become a “political football”, according to the Democratic Alliance. Just weeks after it seemed certain that the communications regulator would report into the department of telecommunications and postal services, communications minister Faith Muthambi has told parliament that it
The ongoing decline in the number of fixed lines in service in South Africa, a trend that has been evident for more than a decade now, is a “big concern” for Telkom, but is the result of fixed-to-mobile substitution more than the cost of line rental. That’s according to the group’s chief operating officer


































