Outa has warned homeowners not to rush rooftop solar registration as Eskom and municipal rules remain unclear and contested.
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The decision by Leon Schreiber to hike fees for accessing home affairs’ online verification system will be reviewed by in court.
South African shoppers can now search Amazon using images, screenshots or barcodes with Amazon Lens.
Despite cost pressures, South Africa’s cloud market is on track to exceed R100-billion by 2029, according to BMIT.
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Property technology specialist e4 has announced plans to expand in the UK.
National inoculation rates were languishing before the sequencing of the new coronavirus variant.
Altron has appointed long-serving executive Andrew Whittaker as MD of its security business, Altron Security, with immediate effect.
Ether is outperforming bitcoin by the greatest amount this year since the native token of the ethereum network was launched in 2015.
Public net sentiment towards Absa has jumped in the past year, an analysis of hundreds of thousands of social media conversations shows.
South Africa’s bid to turn around state-owned companies systemically looted during ex-President Jacob Zuma’s rule…
World News
Amazon.com’s top spokesman, Jay Carney, criticised the administration of President Donald Trump on Wednesday, questioning the patriotism and honesty of the current White House.
Activision Blizzard is facing a fierce backlash and calls for a boycott after a unit of the American game company punished a player for supporting Hong Kong’s protest movement, the latest cultural clash between the US and China.
Two US senate Democrats are urging three payment processing companies to reconsider their involvement with the libra cryptocurrency project envisioned by Facebook and a coalition of other groups.
Last year, Apple said developers would be able to easily bring their iPad apps to Mac computers. So far, the reality has fallen short for some developers and is even leaving consumers paying twice for apps.
Companies that handle people’s personal information, whether of clients or suppliers or simply their own staff, will have to meet stringent requirements when the Protection of Personal Information (PoPI) Bill is enacted and could face fines of up to R10m if they fail to do so
Competition cases, such as the two Telkom recently agreed to settle with South Africa’s Competition Commission, are outside the purview of the law, exploit public distrust of private-sector companies, enrich competition authorities and extract shareholder funds from companies by encouraging executives
































