WhatsApp, Skype, Hangout…face possible regulation in SA
Over-the-top internet services, such as WhatsApp, could be regulated in South Africa depending on the outcome of planned Parliament hearings this month.
Over-the-top internet services, such as WhatsApp, could be regulated in South Africa depending on the outcome of planned Parliament hearings this month.
Dwaine van Vuuren predicted R18 against the dollar by April 2016 in an article posted last year. And following recent activity, he sees the prediction happening slightly sooner.
Fearless as ever, RW Johnson asks the difficult questions about how far “unfire-able” Pravin Gordhan will push the envelope, urging him to show intent by acting decisively against SAA chairman Dudu Myeni.
Biznews community member Michael Clark wonders if there is another skinny book out there waiting to be written by an establishment figure in the rainbow nation that will serve as a wake-up call.
Michael McWilliams, a member of the Biznews Community, has written an open letter to the ANC, offering advice as to how they can extricate themselves from the jaws of destruction.
Zuma has been judged and found wanting by The Economist – he is an ineffective, deeply flawed, clueless leader who shouldn’t be let loose on any democracy.
A Government Gazette notice released by the Department of Energy on December 21 has confirmed Cabinet’s decision to move ahead with the 9 600 MW nuclear procurement programme.
John Battersby analyses the reasons for what he describes as President Jacob Zuma’s greatest blunder, exposing the personalities who played the key roles in taking the country to the edge – and those who helped drag it back from the abyss.
Glencore’s aggressive approach to shrinking the industry’s biggest debt pile is fuelling optimism the trader and miner can retain its investment-grade credit rating amid the worst commodities rout in seven years.
As South Africans endure their deepest economic crisis since 2009, it’s not just President Jacob Zuma they blame. There’s a family whose name is increasingly the target of protest: the Guptas.